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Nigerian Physician Recognized As One Of America’s Top Scientist

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Chyke Doubeni, MD, MPH, associate professor of family medicine & community health, was recognized this week by President Barack Obama as one of the country’s rising scientific stars with a Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers.

The Presidential Award is the highest honor bestowed by the U.S. government on outstanding scientists and engineers in the early phases of their independent research careers. Awardees are selected for their pursuit of innovative research at the frontiers of science and technology and their commitment to community service as demonstrated through scientific leadership, public education or community outreach. Granted to a select group each year, the awards are intended to recognize and nurture some of the finest scientists and engineers who, while early in their research careers, show exceptional potential for leadership at the frontiers of scientific knowledge.

“I am truly honored and feel so fortunate to have been chosen for this award,” Dr. Doubeni said. “It certainly means a lot to have our work recognized at the national level. It shows that the government and the National Institutes of Health are supporting the work of my lab as well as UMass Medical School as a whole.”

Doubeni joined the UMMS faculty in 2004. His research focuses on identifying and reducing disparities in health care. He has received continuous funding from the National Cancer Institute to pursue research activities on disparities in mortality from colorectal cancer and on evaluating the comparative effectiveness of colorectal screening tests. He works extensively with investigators in the Cancer Research Network through the Meyers Primary Care Institute. He also previously served as interim associate vice provost for diversity at UMMS.

Doubeni completed his residency training in family practice at Duke University before becoming a family physician at a community health center in North Carolina. There, he served as medical director and worked to provide comprehensive primary care to the underserved populations, earning the 2001 Community Service Award in Health and Medicine from the Beta Beta Beta Chapter of the Omega Psi Phi Fraternity at Wilson, N.C.

With the funding support associated with the Presidential Award, Doubeni will examine the effectiveness of screening colonoscopy in reducing death among average-risk adults. Doubeni also recently received an award from the National Cancer Institute in which he will collaborate with investigators at Kaiser Permanente Northern and Southern California, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center and Erasmus University to optimize the process of screening for colorectal cancer.

“Dr. Doubeni is passionate about his work reducing inequities in access and quality of care and we are fortunate and very proud to have him as a member of our academic community,” said Terence R. Flotte, MD, the Celia and Isaac Haidak Professor of Medicine, executive deputy chancellor, provost, dean of the School of Medicine and professor of pediatrics.

Doubeni is the third UMass Medical School Presidential Award recipient. In 2005, Neal S. Silverman, PhD, associate professor of medicine and microbiology & physiological systems, was recognized with the award for his research into the mechanisms controlling innate immunity. In 2006, JeanMarie Houghton, MD, PhD, associate professor of medicine and cancer biology, won the award for her work examining the role of stem cells in cancer.

Address by President Jonathan at the 66th UN General Assembly

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STATEMENT
BY DR GOODLUCK EBELE JONATHAN, GCON, GCFR
President, Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces
of the Federal Republic of Nigeria
AT THE 66TH UNITED NATIONS GENERAL ASSEMBLY NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY 21ST SEPTEMBER 2011
Mr. President,
On behalf of the Government and people of Nigeria, I would like to congratulate you on your election as the President of the 66th Session of the General Assembly. I have no doubt that, under your able leadership, the work of the 66th Session would progress to a successful conclusion. I should also like to acknowledge the excellent work done by your predecessor, His Excellency Mr. Joseph Diess, who ably guided the affairs of the 65th Session with consummate skill and commitment.

I must also seize the opportunity to extend my warmest felicitations to Secretary-General, Mr. Ban Ki-Moon, on his well-deserved re-election, a tribute to his leadership and vision. Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon deserves our appreciation for the good work he is doing on our behalf.
I welcome the newest member of our organization – South Sudan. I am confident South Sudan will bring unique perspective to the work of the United Nations and enrich our collective experience.

Mr. President, despite our initial optimism, the peace dividend we had hoped would accrue following the end of the Cold War is yet to materialize. On the contrary, the world of the 21st century in which we live is becoming ever more precarious, unpredictable and certainly more dangerous perhaps more than any other time in history.

The increasing use of terror in various regions of the world as a form of political action poses serious threat to international peace and security. We must win the war against terrorism because it infringes on the fundamental rights of all peoples to life and to live in safety from fear.

Over the past few months, we in Nigeria have faced an upsurge of terrorist attacks in parts of our country. Only recently, the UN Building in Abuja housing several UN Agencies was the target of an atrocious terrorist attack which left several dead. On behalf of the Government and people of Nigeria, I like to convey my sincere condolences to the families of the victims and to the entire UN family for this barbaric and heinous attack against those who have dedicated their lives to helping others.

As the United States and the rest of the world commemorate the 10th anniversary of 9/11, we are reminded of the international dimension of terrorism and the imperative of a concerted global response to combat this scourge.

Mr. President, for us in Nigeria, terrorist acts, rather than intimidate, will only help to strengthen our resolve to develop appropriate national strategies and collaborate even more closely with the international community in the fight against this menace. As part of Nigeria’s efforts to fight terrorism, I signed into law the Terrorism (Prevention) Bill 2011 and the Anti-Money Laundering (Prohibition) Amendment Act on the 3rd of June this year. The new laws not only outlined measures for the prevention and combating of acts of terrorism, but also prohibit the financing of terrorism and laundering of the proceeds of crime. Nigeria will continue to work with the UN and other partners in this global fight.

To this end, Nigeria is working closely with the United Nations Counter Terrorism Implementation Task Force (CTITF), the Counter Terrorism Executive Directorate (CTED), as well as relevant international bodies and friendly countries to sharpen our response mechanisms.

In this connection, the UN Counter Terrorism Implementation Task force is launching its first project in Abuja in November 2011, aimed at conflict prevention and countering the appeal of terrorism to youth through education and dialogue. In addition, Nigeria is a member of the new global body, the Global Counter-Terrorism Forum (GCTF), initiated to galvanize and pull our efforts together to fight the scourge in all its ramifications. We pledge to continue to work with all stakeholders, as we enlarge and intensify our partnerships.

When I stood before this Assembly last year, I gave a solemn pledge that Nigeria will conduct free and credible elections in the second quarter of this year. I am glad to report that we, indeed, conducted what have been adjudged credible and transparent general elections in April 2011. Let me take this opportunity to thank the United Nations and all other organisations and nations that assisted us to achieve that feat. The elections are now behind us and the Government which I head is well on course to implement our programmes of Transformation, a strategic plan for the delivery of the dividends of democracy to citizens, and for preparing our country for the challenges of the future. Indeed, all across my country, there is a renewed sense of optimism and self-belief in our ability to re-create a new Nigeria on the principles of personal freedoms, democracy, good governance and rule of law.

Mr. President, permit me to identify with the theme of this year’s debate of engaging the role of mediation in the peaceful resolution of conflicts in the world. You will recall that Nigeria has been in the fore front of the campaign to promote this theme when, as the President of the Security Council in July 2010, my country adopted the use of Preventive Diplomacy to resolve armed conflicts across the world. This theme is apt and could not have come at a better time when armed conflicts are increasingly taking a greater part of the time and resources of the United Nations.

For too long, the international community has focused too little attention on mediation and preventive diplomacy and far too much effort and resources on military aspects of peace and security. Yet, measures to address the root cause of conflict, including dialogue and mediation, can be far more effective as means to achieving sustainable peace and stability.

I believe that cultivating peace and fulfilling the aims of Chapter V1 of the UN Charter require early identification and appropriate intervention in conflict situations in order to build confidence and trust, and also to preclude the eruption of violence between opposing parties. As I see it, our goal should always be to present the peaceful alternative as a less costly and effective way of achieving political and social objectives. I also believe that in addition to other traditional tools of preventive diplomacy, democracy and good governance can be particularly important in building a just, equitable and inclusive society. By focusing on mediation as a tool for conflict prevention, we are able to address the real triggers of conflict, without which we cannot achieve sustainable solutions.

However, for the world to move from a culture of response after conflict to that of a culture of prevention, the international community must muster the political will to promote preventive diplomacy, in particular through mediation. This will necessarily entail re-dedicating greater human and financial resources to institutions and mechanisms that already exist within and outside the UN system for conflict prevention and resolution.

Going forward, I should like to propose the establishment, under the Secretary-General’s Office, a Conflict Mediation Commission, to be charged, among others, with the collation of information on conflict situations across the world, identify the dramatis personae and develop appropriate strategies for initiating resolution of such conflicts. The Commission will also develop rules of engagement, including sanctions which would apply to those who may obstruct efforts to resolve conflicts peacefully.
Mr. President, this naturally brings me to the issue of trafficking in Small Arms and Light Weapons (SALW).

Mr. President, if your idea of resolving conflicts through mediation is to succeed, then the problem of trafficking in small arms and light weapons must be frontally tackled. The proliferation of Small Arms and Light Weapons is particularly worrisome, due to their easy accessibility and availability to unauthorized persons and groups, who in turn have used these arms to create instability and insecurity in much of the countries in the developing world. Even worse, the proliferation of these weapons has proved handy in the hands of terrorists.

This explains our commitment to, and preoccupation with, the actualization of an Arms Trade Treaty (ATT) that robustly addresses the illicit trade in Small Arms and Light Weapons which, as we all know, are among the major causes of destabilization and conflict in West Africa.
The danger of proliferation of, and illicit trade in Small Arms and Light Weapons informed Nigeria’s decision to co-sponsor Resolution 61/89 of 2006, the principal objective being to provide a legally binding international instrument for the trade in conventional arms. We will continue to support all initiatives towards the realization of an Arms Trade Treaty in 2012. I call on all Member States of the UN to join in this endeavour.

The increasing rate of piracy and other maritime crimes, with their attendant damaging effects on security, trade and economic activities in the Gulf of Guinea and other locations call for coordinated regional and global approaches. In this respect, I like to express support for the proposal of the Secretary General to deploy a United Nations Assessment Mission to under-study the situation in the Gulf of Guinea and explore possible options for UN support and action. Our expectation is that a positive outcome from such a strategy will not only benefit our sub-region but the larger international community as well. I am already consulting with other Leaders in our sub-region to boost this initiative.

Mr. President, gender equality and women empowerment strategy of the UN, especially through the creation of UN Women, deserve commendation and support. Nigeria’s support for UN Women, to which we have made substantial contributions, reflects our desire to harness the potentials of women in the task of nation building.

Our national action plan on gender equality and women empowerment places strong emphasis on women’s effective participation in politics and adequate representation in public office. I am, indeed, proud to announce to this august Assembly that more than 30% of my Cabinet is made up of women. Let me also commend the Executive Board of UN Women on the successful take-off of the entity. UN Women can be assured of Nigeria’s strong support.

Mr. President, this year, prevention of non-communicable diseases is one of the issues slated for discussion at our High Level Meeting (HLM). Only three months ago, I attended the High Level Meeting on AIDS, where I pledged Nigeria’s commitment to healthcare, as part of our country’s human capital development agenda. My Government is intensifying efforts to improve on national healthcare delivery by allocating substantial resources to primary healthcare. We look forward to a productive outcome of the High Level Meeting on non-communicable diseases at the end of this Session. In the same vein, I welcome discussions at the High Level Meeting on Desertification and Land degradation as they continue to pose challenges to our developmental efforts. This is why Nigeria strongly supports the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD), including strategies and best practices to address this challenge.

In order to demonstrate our commitment to human rights, Nigeria recently ratified the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities and acceded to four other international human rights instruments, including the optional protocol on the Convention against Torture and Migrant Workers. My Government has also passed into law the National Human Right Commission Amendment Act (2011), Legal Aid Council Amendment Act (2011) and Freedom of Information Act (2011). Nigeria will continue to accord the highest priority to human rights issues as they speak directly to the dignity and inalienable rights of humanity.

Mr. President, we in West Africa are passing through an exciting season of democratic rebirth. Before the end of year 2011, elections would have held in six countries in West Africa. These elections will set these countries along the path of political stability, progress, good governance and sustainable development, some of which benefits we have begun to experience. The progress we have made could not have been possible without the support of the United Nations.

The resolution of the conflict in Cote d’Ivoire is a case in point. I consider the inauguration of President Ouatarra not just a success for Cote d’Ivoire but also for the international community, which spoke with one voice and acted in concert in support of the Ivorian people.
The end of this crisis must be seen by all as the beginning of our journey towards the consolidation of the democratic culture and good governance in Africa. Having put this crisis behind us, the international community must now provide robust assistance to the country as it embarks on the tasks of post conflict reconstruction and national reconciliation.

Mr. President, the struggle for self governance and majority rule in Africa started in the forties and by 1957, Ghana had gained independence. Today, all African States have achieved self determination and majority rule. These are no small achievements.

But we still have much work to do. A great deal of the work that remains is to build viable and capable states in Africa on the principles of popular participation, rule of law and respect for human rights, as we pledged to do in the Constitutive Act of the African Union. Nigeria believes that these values must remain at the core of governance in Africa, if we are ever to achieve the goals of stability, security and development.

As Nigeria is approaching the end of its tenure on the Security Council, I will like to express my country’s deep appreciation for the opportunity to serve in this important organ. In this course of our stewardship, the Council had the courage to reach many difficult decisions that resulted in positive development around the world. We are proud to be associated with these decisions.

I would like to urge the Council to continue its important work in the maintenance of international peace and security. In spite of the Council’s many successes, it is our belief that this important organ will benefit from the vigour and fresh perspectives which only a revamped Council that accommodated changing global political realities can provide. Mr. President, I urge you to set up clear criteria for the reform of the UN Security Council in line with the demand of the majority of the World. A reformed UN Security Council is the only way to demonstrate that all nations have equal stake in the UN. Nigeria looks forward to the prospect of membership in a reformed UN Security Council.

I thank you.

Nigerian rapist who can't be deported because EU judges say it would violate his right to family life

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A Nigerian rapist escaped deportation yesterday after European judges ruled he had a right to a ‘private life’ in Britain.

Akindoyin Akinshipe, 24, was due to be sent home after losing appeal after appeal in the British courts over his jailing for an attack on a girl of 13.

But in a staggering reversal yesterday, the European Court of Human Rights said this would breach his right to a ‘private and family life’.

This is despite him not having a wife, long-term partner or children in the UK - factors which foreign criminals have used to stay here under Article 8 of the Human Rights Act.

The panel of seven – including judges from Bosnia, Albania and Montenegro – said the court must protect his ‘social ties’ with Britain, which have grown while he resisted deportation.

They said removing him from this country – where he works for a council and attends church – would be ‘disproportionate’ as he has committed no further offences and is no longer a danger to the public.

But critics accused the Strasbourg court of undermining Britain’s border controls.

Tory MP Dominic Raab said: ‘It is a warped notion of human rights that allows a convicted rapist to claim the right to family life to avoid deportation.’

‘Inflated human rights claims threaten our border controls. It is vital we reform the Strasbourg court as well as UK law to restore some common sense.’

Last year failed asylum seeker Aso Mohammed Ibrahim, who ran over 12-year-old Amy Houston and left her to ‘die like a dog’ under the wheels of his car, used Article 8 to stay in this country because he has fathered two children here.

In 2010 around 200 foreign criminals won the right to stay using Article 8, the right to a ‘private and family life’.

Tory ministers have pledged to replace the Human Rights Act – which enshrines the European Convention on Human Rights into British law – with a UK Bill of Rights.

But they have been opposed by their Liberal Democrat coalition partners.

Akinshipe spent his first 13 years living near Lagos in Nigeria.

He arrived in Britain in September 2000 with his two sisters to join his mother, who came four years earlier to work as a nurse.

Just two years later, at the age of 15, he was convicted of raping the 13-year-old.

But only one year and ten months into a four-year sentence in a young offenders’ institution, he was released for good behaviour.

The probation service said there was a low risk of him committing further offences. He won his initial appeal against deportation, but this was overturned by a tribunal which backed returning him to Nigeria because of the seriousness of the crime.

His family life in the UK did not go ‘beyond normal emotional ties’ the judge said.

His case was so flimsy that the Court of Appeal refused to hear it and in January 2008 his domestic legal avenues were exhausted.

But astonishingly, two years elapsed before the Home Office began action to deport him in September last year. In the meantime, he had obtained three A-levels, and he was about to finish a degree in economics and banking.

He then appealed to Strasbourg. The European judges, citing his education and employment record and lack of any further crimes, said that since his release his conduct has been ‘exemplary’.

Ruling in his favour and awarding costs of nearly £3,500, they said he had made ‘commendable efforts to rehabilitate himself and to reintegrate into society over a period of seven years’.

They added: ‘It must be accepted that the totality of social ties between settled migrants and the community in which they are living constitutes part of the concept of “private life” within the meaning of Article 8’.

Tory MP Douglas Carswell said: ‘This shows that it doesn’t matter who you vote for and it doesn’t matter what the politicians promise when it comes to immigration, as long as we remain subject to the Convention rapists who we want to deport will be free to stay.’

Last night Akinshipe’s mother, Monisola Shrodeinde, who works as a hospital nurse in south London, said the decision was ‘very fair’.

She added: ‘We are very, very happy. It really is very good news for him.’

A spokesman for the UK Border Agency said: ‘We are extremely disappointed by this judgment and will consider the next steps carefully.

‘This Government is determined to remove foreign criminals from the UK and does not believe that Article 8, the right to family or private life, should outweigh the need to protect the public from serious criminals.’

Boko Haram Vs President Jonathan: Putting The Welfare Of The Nation At Risk

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Washington, D.C. July 20, 2011. . . Chapter 4 (33-46) of the 1999 Constitution of Nigeria provides for various fundamental rights to all Nigerians. These rights include the freedom of thought, conscience, religion, as well as the right to move freely throughout Nigeria and to reside in any part thereof. Recent terrorist acts by the faceless Boko Harem religious sect is in direct violation of at least, this section of the Nigerian Constitution. The inability for the Nigerian Government to provide its citizens with a reasonable amount of security against such acts by this notorious group is also a gross dereliction of duty.

It is despicable that a group would be allowed to bomb the nation’s capital on a very important day, without the culprits being brought to justice. This same group had the audacity to bomb the headquarters of the Nigerian Police force in broad day light obviously an escalation due to inaction. This inaction or slow pace of enforcement reminds one of the “go slow” days of President Yar’Adua and is totally unacceptable. It further goes to prove that the government knows those who are behind them but chose not to bring down the long arm of the law on them.

Several dastardly and irresponsible acts including numerous human rights abuses, acts of violence against innocent members of the NYSC and unarmed civilians have been attributed to this lawless group and it is time for it to end.

Egbe Omo Yoruba National Association of Yoruba Descendants in North America (Egbe) demand that the Nigerian Government immediately curtail with all its might, legally and in a civilized manner, the terrorist organization called Boko Haram. If organizations from the Western and Eastern Nigerian with legitimate causes can be dealt with in more violent and inhumane manner, then this group whose main right of existence is a violation of the Constitution should not be allowed to murder and cause fear among most of the law abiding citizens of the Country. A shorter and softer yard stick should not be used to address any barbaric matters just because it is evolving from the North.

The Egbe is not advocating that a violence means of addressing the situation be employed like is being done with the use of the Joint Task Force (JTF), what we are asking for is a quick and thorough investigation, consequent punishment and crack down of the force causing the havoc.

If the Boko Haram situation is not addressed expeditiously, a wedge will continue to be drawn between Northern and Southern Nigeria as well as give credence to those who have been advocating for a break up of the conglomeration of nations called Nigeria because their government cannot guarantee their security. Nigerians in the immediate affected areas also deserve all the rights guaranteed in the Constitution; Living in fear of their neighbor or being relocated like refugees in their own country is not one of them.

Mr. President, it is your job to ensure that the wellbeing of all Nigerian is of paramount concern to you and it is your duty to make it happen. So far, this has not been adequately demonstrated. This is not the time to hide under a rock in Abuja, but to show some spine by making a major statement to Nigerians and the World about how serious you are on fighting terrorist groups in Nigeria.

The World is watching.

Egbe Omo Yoruba To Meet In New York

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By Dele Alade

Yoruba sons and daughters will meet in New York from September 9 to 11, 2011. In a joint statement issued in New York by Barrister Dele Alade, the Public Relations Officer of Egbe Omo Yoruba of Greater New York and Mr. Oluwaseyi Ogunyinka, the General Secretary of Egbe Omo Yoruba New York, New York, the event will be the 19th National Convention of Egbe Omo Yoruba North America.

The convention will take place at Long Island Marriott Hotel, Uniondale, New York. The theme of the convention is: "Yoruba Beyond 2011". Yoruba leaders including political and traditional rulers are expected to attend the convention.  All the governors of Yoruba states of Lagos, Ogun, Oyo, Ondo, Ekiti and Osun are also expected at the convention.

The statement promises that the Convention Committee co-chaired by Dr. Adegboyega Dada and Mr. Yinka Belo will give Yoruba a great convention. Speaking to the press on the convention, the President of Egbe Omo Yoruba Greater New York, Chief Babatunde Olatunbosun, said that the convention will set post-2011 political and economic agenda for Yoruba nation within the Nigerian state. He said that the convention will also solidify the international friendships the Yoruba in the Diaspora has been able to build for the Yoruba nation.  Experts from various fields of endeavor including law, security, energy, engineering, politics and economy will address the convention.

Chief Olatunbosun called on all Yoruba sons and daughters to attend the convention so as to have the opportunity to have their inputs in the Yoruba agenda.

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