Showing posts with label VIOLENCE. Show all posts
Showing posts with label VIOLENCE. Show all posts

Saturday, May 17, 2014

NIGERIANS IN ITALY ASK THE E.U...TO ASSIST...BRING BACK OUR GIRLS

The Nigerian community in  Italy  today (17/05/2014) in the city of  Latina  had a peaceful march  to  say  “NO” to the “Boko Haram” sect  and   to ask   for the  safe return of the school  girls   kidnapped  by this  group  last month "….BRING BACK OUR GIRLS…."


The  march   started  by 10am and ended at noon.
Many members of the Nigerian community  were present.  The African  DIASPORA    was  also  represented by many people   especially   Cameroonians and Ugandans. The  local authorities and members  of the   Police  force, Carabinieri and  other   security/law enforcement agents were   also there to keep  order/ peace and also show their  solidarity.
 Many Italians   were  also in attendance  to  show their  solidarity to this   initiative. 
A  senator  of the  Italian republic  by name Ivana SIMEONI
(http://www.senato.it/leg/17/BGT/Schede/Attsen/00029181.htm#) was in attendance . She is  a member of the  parliamentary commission  for the defence of  human rights.

Many  Nigerians, other Africans and Italians  made speeches of  encouragement and support  for the Nigerian  government and the parents of the people in the hands of this terrorist group.
The   speaker  of the community and  the organizers  of this  event; Dott Lanre Tytler  thanked  members of the  community, the mayor of  Latina, the  local authorities and  the Italian public in general  for their  support and  enjoined them to encourage  the EU in every way in their  effort  to  help Nigeria  come out of this problem, which  might become a global issue if  ignored.
 

Sunday, October 16, 2011

‘LA POLIZIA E’ ANCHE NOI’......PROTESTA....ROMA


 ‘LA POLIZIA E’ ANCHE NOI’
Un amico poliziotto in ferie voleva andare con i figli e moglie per la manifestazione (pacifica) di oggi a Roma ma era stata chiamata di urgenza per mantenere ordine durante la manifestazione……. E tornato ferito…non grave…… che ironia …che vita…

Monday, August 15, 2011

The Nigerian Connection



The Nigerian Connection - People & Power - Al Jazeera English

Investigating the plight of African women caught up in a web of organised crime, prostitution and human trafficking.

People and Power Last Modified: 10 Aug 2011 10:12

Filmmakers: Orlando von Einsiedel and Caroline Pare

Every year tens of thousands of West Africans migrate to Europe in search of a better life. But for some of them that search will end in tragedy, as they fall victim to competing mafia gangs that prey on the hopes of the desperate. In southern Italy, it is Nigerian women who are among the most exploited, with many ending up trapped in the nightmare world of the sex trade.


In the first of two special reports, Juliana Ruhfus investigates the plight of African women caught up in a web of organised crime, prostitution and people trafficking. In the following account Chiara Caprio, an Italian journalist who was involved in the making of the film, describes what they found out in southern Italy.

The ghetto of Destra Volturno, an assembly of houses once used by Neapolitan tourists, is surrounded by flowers as it hosts the funeral of Mary Morad, a seven-year-old from Ghana. She was killed by a man with psychiatric problems. But in Castel Volturno, more than one-third of the 25,000 official citizens are African and, in particular, Ghanaian and Nigerian.

Al Jazeera came to investigate the phenomenon of Nigerian organised crime in this small town, quickly forgotten after serious riots in 2008, when hundreds of Africans took to the streets to protest against the massacre of six young Ghanaians committed by Giuseppe Setola, the army of the Casalesi clan.

Mary's family is waiting for the coffin and tension grows as delays and friction increase. Bose Atta, Mary's Nigerian mother, who was trafficked to Italy to be forced into prostitution, is nervous. She cries as her friends express anger against Mary's father, a man from Ghana who is now married to another Nigerian woman.
Finally, the coffin arrives and a group of men start celebrating with a Muslim rite. An improvised march towards the cemetery starts under a warm sun overheating a tormented African community.


Stronger than ever

"The Domitiana crosses Castel Volturno for 28 kilometres," says Stefano Ricciardiello, a detective at the local police station, a small and shabby office overwhelmed by new and old papers covering stories of murders, repatriations and organised crime. "The new African mafia's activities have invaded the whole territory."
He is showing us along the roads where, one after another, Nigerian women and young girls are waiting for clients.

According to the United Nations Interregional Crime and Justice Research Institute (UNICRI), Italy is now the main destination for more than 10,000 Nigerian prostitutes, trafficked from Benin City to European cities and criminal hubs, just like the Domitiana and its coast.

"Nigerian criminals are able to find agreements with all the mafias, from Colombians to Chinese. But it's an easy game for them in Italy also for another reason: the high number of Italian clients who look for prostitutes night and day," says Giovanni Conzo, a prosecutor at the anti-mafia section in Naples.

"This organisation is stronger than ever. We should stop them before they take full control of our region," he adds. But Conzo's words offer just a glimmer of hope.
Using voodoo to enslav
Isoke Aikpitanyi, a former victim of trafficking and now the main reference point for Nigerian women in Italy, knows how this business is managed in Caserta's area. As she walks in Castel Volturno's historic centre, she explains: "Today in Italy there are almost 10,000 madams, each one in control of an average of two or three girls."
Madams are the key, she explains. They are the main actors in this exploitation. They force girls into prostitution and ask for money to repay the debt. They work with "brothers", men who are in charge of physically trafficking the "babies", as girls forced into prostitution are called.

But Nigerian human trafficking is often associated with drug smuggling and a distorted use of religious tradition.

The women and girls are often forced to undergo a Juju oath-swearing ritual that commits them to repaying the money they owe to their smugglers on pain of death or insanity.
"The Juju, the voodoo rite, it's not a bad practice. It was used to bring justice, but they ruined everything," says Isoke with anger. "They don't care how they make their money as far as they make it. They use Juju to enslave."

Even in this hell, there are people who try not to lose hope. Sister Antonia, a Nigerian nun of the Sacred Heart of Jesus order, manages a shelter, the Casa Santa Maria dell'Accoglienza, launched in 2000 in the Fernandes centre by the Capua-based Caritas. Here, more than 70 women have found a place to stay and 10 children have been born.

"We were called by the bishop of Capua, Mons. Bruno Schettino, to promote these girls' integration. They are all former prostitutes. If they want to change their lives, they know they'll always find a place here," Sister Antonia says.

The women can stay for between six months and a year, a period when they dedicate their time to education and "to gain[ing] their dignity back," explains Sister Antonia. The nuns give the girls the opportunity to write down their stories and explain what happened and who forced them into prostitution.
"We try to make them understand that Juju won't have any effect on them," she says.
But we met girls who still work on the streets and believe in the agreements they made. Some of them have to repay debts of up to $58,000 and are still terrified of the powerful consequences of Juju on their families and themselves.


The Nigerian Connection can be seen from Wednesday, August 10, at the following times GMT: Wednesday: 2230; Thursday: 0930; Friday: 0330; Saturday: 1630; Sunday: 2230; Monday: 0930.




The Nigerian Connection II:

In the second part of the special investigation, The Nigerian Connection II, Juliana Ruhfus follows the trail from Italy back to Benin City in Nigeria, from where women, desperately seeking an escape from grinding poverty, are trafficked to Europe.
To pay for their travel, many of them incur massive debts to organised crime gangs in the false belief that a lucrative regular job awaits them at the other end. Often they are forced to undergo a Juju oath-swearing ritual that commits them to repaying the money on pain of death or insanity.

When they arrive in Europe, they discover the only way they can do this is by agreeing to work in the sex trade. A Juju priest who is involved in the trade justifies the use of ritual practices on the grounds that he is offering a service to the community.
But as Juliana discovers, it is not just traditional African religions in West Africa that contribute to this trade on bonded labour. Evangelical Christian pastors have been involved too.

The Nigerian Connection II can be seen from Wednesday, August 17, 2011.

Monday, March 21, 2011

NO FLY ZONE



"No Fly Zone" in italiano vuol dire una zona in cui non si può volare. La risoluzione 1973dell'ONU si riferisce a questo. La sua applicazione in Libia è per lo meno estesa, presa un po' alla larga. Il primo intervento francese infatti ha colpito dei carri armati volanti vicino a Bengasi. Il carro armato volante è un'invenzione libica, la solita arma segreta dei dittatori, come la V2 di Hitler, il primo missile a distanza. Sarkozy non si è fatto sorprendere. Gli americani e gli inglesi hanno poi bombardato raso terra Tripoli e Sirte, in particolare si sono concentrati sul bunker volante di Gheddafi. Un'applicazione rigorosa della "No Fly Zone". Khamis, un figlio di Gheddafi, sarebbe stato ucciso a Tripoli. Testimoni oculari lo hanno visto mentre volava come Icaro nei cieli della Tripolitania a dispetto delle indicazioni delle Nazioni Unite. Se un ospedale si alzerà in volo, un missile tomahawk colpirà implacabile.

http://www.beppegrillo.it/2011/03/no_fly_zone/index.html

Monday, January 12, 2009

ENVYING GAZA......A NIGERIAN

HARD TALKS
As we watch the onslaught in GAZA (Palestine) one is dismayed and shocked by the pictures, but wait.. I sat back to analyse some of the details and I was more dismayed by the sensation of envy or jealousy that overcame me as a Nigerian. I am not a sadist.

  • I saw an old woman getting water from a tap in a half bombed home. Good God!!! How many homes do we have running water in 'Peaceful' Nigeria?
  • How many ambulances do we have in Nigeria for 145 million African giants? I imagined all the road accident 'rescues' I have witnessed in Peace time Nigeria an I thought i never imagined them...... BTW when was the last time you saw an ambulance rushing to an accident scene in any part of Nigeria?
  • The next scene sent me crying not for Palestinians only but for Lagosians, Coal city -Enugu etc populace.....alas a family at the underground part of their home were reading the Koran with a light from electricity (not from a generator) and were telling the press man that the nearby blocks are in darkness and suffering because their power transformer was rocketed a day earlier. My heart broke when I thought of Nigeria (NEPA) or whatever and the whole infrastructure at the services of the GIANT OF AFRICA. I wondered who 'rocketed' all the transformers in Nigeria?
  • FIREMEN ; This is a professional figure children in Nigeria know from their books and TV programs. In a bus stop at Enugu (fire service) i.e. after Enugu zoo, a boy of 13 in the bus with me asked why it was called such a name. I told him some 'before the war' stories of Enugu fire service. Now he will see them in Gaza withtheir water hoses.
I better stop here and hope not to see Nigerians migrating to Gaza tomorrow or at least until peace comes back there.
I stand to be corrected or calmed of this 'macabrous Envy or thoughts'
Long live Nigeria and peace to the Middle East

Charles Okey Chukbyke

Sunday, January 11, 2009

CHOOSE THE 'GOOD MAN'

1.Hamas fires rockets into kindergarten school yard & Surprise kamikaze in Israel= DEATHS




2. Israel bombs UN school in Gaza & Israeli drones dropped leaflets over the embattled city warning residents of more bombs on them soon= DEATHS

Monday, December 29, 2008

"Militari cercansi per la pace in Somalia?".

La pace lontana

29 dicembre 2008

L'Etiopia si prepara a ritirare le sue truppe. Aprendo un'altra incognita pesante sul futuro del già martoriato paese. Che 2009 sarà?

Militari cercansi per la pace in Somalia. Suona più o meno così l'appello fatto di recente dall'Unione africana. Per il mese di gennaio l'Etiopia ha annunciato il ritiro dal territorio somalo delle proprie truppe, intervenute due anni fa in soccorso del debole governo di transizione e contro le corti islamiche, che avevano conquistato la quasi totalità del Paese. Alla fine del 2008 si è parlato di un possibile invio di caschi blu nel Paese del Corno d'Africa per un'operazione di peacekeeping, ma il segretario generale dell'Onu Ban Ki-Moon ha frenato, dicendo che i tempi non sono maturi e che in Somalia, per ora, «non c'è nessuna pace da mantenere». Il segretario generale dell'Onu raccomanda piuttosto di rafforzare la missione di pace dell'Unione africana (Amisom) presente in Somalia, indicandola come l'unica «opzione realistica in questo momento» per favorire la stabilità nel Paese. In una lettera inviata al Consiglio di Sicurezza, Ban sollecita gli Stati membri a garantire all'Amisom sostegno finanziario e logistico, e alle forze di sicurezza somale addestramento, equipaggiamento e tutti i rinforzi utili, in modo da favorire il processo di pace avviato con l'accordo di Gibuti. Poco prima di natale, l'Unione africana (Ua) ha prorogato di due mesi il mandato Amisom in scadenza alla fine dell'anno, sollecitando l'invio di altre truppe da parte degli Stati membri.

Al momento sono 3.400 i militari dispiegati in Somalia, messi a disposizione da Uganda e Burundi, contro gli 8.000 autorizzati all'inizio del 2007. La Nigeria ha già annunciato l'invio di un battaglione. «Tre Paesi si sono già offerti per andare in Somalia», ha detto il ministro degli Esteri dello Zambia, Kabinga Pande, che presiedeva la riunione. «Uganda e Burundi con almeno un altro battaglione a testa, e la Nigeria ha confermato un battaglione». Il Commissario per la pace e la sicurezza dell'Unione africana, Ramtane Lamamra, ha sottolineato «la forte volontà della comunità internazionale di portare avanti la missione di pace Amisom», riferendo di aver ricevuto «rassicurazioni dall'Onu» su un sostegno logistico e sulla possibilità a lungo termine di trasformare l'Amisom in forza di mantenimento della pace Onu. Secondo Lamamra, Unione europea e Lega Araba hanno già promesso appoggi finanziari.

Nella sua missiva al Consiglio di sicurezza Onu, Ban Ki-moon indica in una Forza multinazionale, piuttosto che in una tipica missione di peacekeeping, dotata di piene capacità militari per garantire la cessazione delle ostilità, la risposta più appropriata alla sfida posta dalla Somalia. Tuttavia, nessun Stato membro si è offerto finora di guidare una missione di questo genere e le risposte ricevute da Ban da circa 50 Paesi e tre organizzazioni internazionali non sono state incoraggiati, ha ricordato il suo portavoce Michele Montas, in un comunicato Onu. «I suoi sforzi per mobilitare una robusta forza di stabilizzazione non si sono ancora materializzati», ha detto Montas, «in assenza di una forza di stabilizzazione, le opzioni presentate al Consiglio di Sicurezza prevedono un pacchetto di misure quali il rafforzamento di Amisom, un maggior addestramento del personale militare e di polizia somalo, e la creazione di una forza navale con una capacità di intervento rapida, che consentano al processo di pace di mettere radici».

Il governo di transizione somalo sostenuto dall'Onu e l'opposizione islamica moderata 'Alleanza per la ri-liberazione della Somalia (Ars)' hanno raggiunto un'intesa per la condivisione del potere, nell'ambito dell'accordo di pace firmato a Gibuti lo scorso agosto, che chiede il cessate il fuoco e il ritiro delle truppe etiopi dalla Somalia. Nel dettaglio, l'intesa prevede di raddoppiare gli attuali 275 membri del Parlamento, assegnando 200 seggi all'Ars e i restanti 75 a quanti «sono finora rimasti fuori dal processo di pace, come i membri della società civile, tra cui donne e la comunità imprenditoriale, e della diaspora». Il nuovo parlamento avrà quindi il compito di eleggere la nuova leadership del Paese e rimarrà in carica altri due anni rispetto alla scadenza del periodo di transizione, fissata al 2009 nella Carta costituzionale provvisoria.

In Somalia, senza un governo effettivo dal '91, stanno acquisendo sempre più potere i gruppi islamisti radicali. A metà dicembre i miliziani islamici al Shabab hanno chiuso l'unica stazione radio attiva nella città somala di Chisimaio, 500 chilometri a sud di Mogadiscio. Una decina di miliziani hanno fatto irruzione negli uffici della stazione radio e hanno consegnato al direttore un provvedimento firmato da Hassan Yaqub Alil, responsabile per l'Informazione dell'amministrazione islamica della città, in cui si accusa l'emittente di trasmettere musica e informazione "anti-islamica". L'organizzazione Committee to Protect Journalists ha quindi lanciato un appello ad Alil perchè «riveda la sua decisione e consenta all'unica stazione radio di Chisimaio, HornAfrik, di riprendere le trasmissioni», sottolineando come «il flusso libero di notizie sia nell'interesse del Paese». HornAfrik, una delle poche voci indipendenti in Somalia, aveva festeggiato il suo 12esimo anno di attività il giorno prima del raid. Uno dei fondatori della radio, Ali Sharmarke, è rimasto ucciso nel 2007. Il porto di Chisimaio dallo scorso agosto è sotto il controllo di una coalizione di forze fedeli al leader Hassan Turki e degli Shabab. Turki è accusato da Washington di terrorismo. E sempre a Chisimaio, lo scorso ottobre, le Corti islamiche hanno emesso ed eseguito una condanna a morte per lapidazione di una bambina di 13 anni, vittima di stupro.

«Si dice che la Somalia sia in mano ai clan, negli ultimi tempi mi sembra invece il contrario, e cioè che abbiano perso il controllo della situazione. Mentre sono nuovi gruppi fondamentalisti, non più costituiti necessariamente su base etnica, ad aver acquisito molto potere» ha detto a Vita uno dei più autorevoli osservatori di quanto accade nel Corno D'Africa, mons. Giorgio Bertin, amministratore apostolico di Mogadiscio. Secondo le ultime notizie, potrebbero essere finite in mano agli Shebab, i giovani miliziani islamici somali, anche suor Caterina Giraudo e suor Maria Teresa Oliviero, le due suore italiane rapite in Kenya lo scorso novembre

FONTE

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

CONGO'S RICHES

The Spoils

Congo's Riches, Looted by Renegade Troops

Johan Spanner for The New York Times

Men mined for tin ore in a pit in eastern Congo that is part of a lucrative operation controlled by renegade soldiers. The fighters extort and tax at will.

Published: November 15, 2008

BISIE, Congo — Deep in the forest, high on a ridge stripped bare of trees and vines, the colonel sat atop his mountain of ore. In track pants and a T-shirt, he needed no uniform to prove he was a soldier, no epaulets to reveal his rank. Everyone here knows that Col. Samy Matumo, commander of a renegade brigade of army troops that controls this mineral-rich territory, is the master of every hilltop as far as the eye can see.

The Spoils

Buried Treasure, Broken Nation

SCRAMBLING FOR HIDDEN WEALTH A hunter discovered tin ore in eastern Congo in 2002, and miners arrived almost overnight. In the battle for control of the mine in Bisie, a militia allied with the government won out.

Columns of men, bent double under 110-pound sacks of tin ore, emerged from the colonel's mine shaft. It had been carved hundreds of feet into the mountain with Iron Age tools powered by human sweat, muscle and bone. Porters carry the ore nearly 30 miles on their backs, a two-day trek through a mud-slicked maze to the nearest road and a world hungry for the laptops and other electronics that tin helps create, each man a link in a long global chain.

On paper, the exploration rights to this mine belong to a consortium of British and South African investors who say they will turn this perilous and exploitative operation into a safe, modern beacon of prosperity for Congo. But in practice, the consortium's workers cannot even set foot on the mountain. Like a mafia, Colonel Matumo and his men extort, tax and appropriate at will, draining this vast operation, worth as much as $80 million a year.

The exploitation of this mountain is emblematic of the failure to right this sprawling African nation after many years of tyranny and war, and of the deadly role the country's immense natural wealth has played in its misery.

Despite a costly effort to unite the nation's many militias into a single national army, plus billions of dollars spent on international peacekeepers and an election in 2006 that brought democracy to Congo for the first time in four decades, the government is unable or unwilling to force these fighters — who wear government army uniforms and collect government paychecks — to leave the mountain.

The ore these fighters control is central to the chaos that plagues Congo, helping to perpetuate a conflict in which as many as five million people have died since the mid-1990s, mostly from hunger and disease. In the latest chapter, fighting between government troops and a renegade general named Laurent Nkunda has forced hundreds of thousands of civilians here in eastern Congo to flee and pushed the nation to the brink of a new regional war.

The proceeds of mines like this one, along with the illegal tributes collected on roads and border crossings controlled by rebel groups, militias and government soldiers, help bankroll virtually every armed group in the region.

No roads lead to Bisie. This hidden town of 10,000 lies about 30 miles down a winding, muddy footpath through dense, equatorial forest. Built entirely for the mine, it is a cloistered world of expropriation and violence that mirrors the broad crisis in Congo.

This is Africa's resource curse: The wealth is unearthed by the poor, controlled by the strong, then sold to a world largely oblivious of its origins.

Under Colonel Matumo, Bisie is a Darwinian place where those with weapons and money leech off a desperate horde.

The chokehold begins far from the mine. At the trailhead, a burly soldier demands 50 cents from each person entering the narrow trail to the mine. A clamoring crowd hands wrinkled bills to the soldier, who opens the wooden gate a crack to let in those with cash.

At the other end of the trail, at the base of the mountain, another crowd forms at the gate into Bisie. Porters exhausted from the two-day trek sprawl on felled trees, waiting for soldiers to inspect their loads and extract another tribute. The price is usually 10 percent of entering merchandise and cash.

The men at the checkpoints describe these payments as taxes. But the people of Bisie do not get much in return. The village is a filthy warren of mud huts. Hundreds of haphazard latrines flood narrow, trash-filled alleyways. Disease courses through the town, carried by water from a river that is used for everything from washing clothes to cleaning ore. Jawbones of slaughtered cows and goats stud the riverbed. When it rains, the river overflows, spreading cholera and dysentery.

In some ways, Bisie is a thriving commercial town. It has makeshift theaters showing bootleg kung fu movies on televisions powered by sputtering generators. Its bars are stocked with Johnnie Walker whiskey and Primus beer, each bottle carried through the jungle. There is no telephone service, but a ham radio system passes messages between the mine and the outside world. It has hotels that double as brothels. There is even a clapboard church.



NYTIMES PICTURES

SOURCE

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SHAITSU

SHAITSU
Il massaggio Shiatsu che si effettua tramite la pressione delle dita, dei palmi delle mani e dei piedi e dei gomiti su tutto il corpo, agisce sui punti energetici considerati dall'agopuntura. Stimola la circolazione sanguigna ed il flusso linfatico, agisce sul sistema nervoso allentando la tensione muscolare più profonda, rimuove le tossine dei tessuti, risveglia il sistema ormonale e sollecita la capacità di autoguarigione del corpo.

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