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Tuesday, 3 June 2014

AKWA IBOM:Governor Akpabio Promises To Repeal Amendments To Pension Law


By ThisDay Newspapers on June 4, 2014

Akwa Ibom State Governor, Chief Godswill Akpabio, yesterday promised to write to the state House of Assembly to repeal the amendments to the state Governors and Deputy Governors’ Pension Law.
The law, which was last week assented to by the governor after it was passed by the state lawmakers, has come under severe criticism by a cross section of Nigerians.

The law had specifically pegged the amount former governors and deputies could spend annually on medical bills to N100 million and N50 million respectively.

But this was misrepresented by the opponents of the state government while the figures attributed as the medical pension benefits to be enjoyed by ex-governors of the state and their deputies were grossly exaggerated.

Akpabio, in a statement made available to journalists in Lagos on Tuesday, June 3, 2014 said after due consideration of the misinformation and the opposition in the state, he would ensure that the lawmakers expunge the provisions putting a ceiling of N100 million and N50 million on the medical treatment of former governors and deputy governors of the state respectively from the law.

He asked the lawmakers to maintain the status quo by reverting to the open-ended situation inherent in the law before it was amended.

The governor, who said he was deeply saddened by the vilification of the state lawmakers for undertaking a course of action, which should have been applauded, added he would as an interim measure use his executive fiat to set up a medical council that would verify all future medical claims by former governors and deputy governors of Akwa Ibom.

But in the long-term, he said, a new legislation would be proposed to cater to a health insurance scheme for former executive office holders in the state.

The governor, who chronicled how the law was enacted in 1998 and amended in 1999, 2002 and 2007, stated that prior to the current amendment, it was being abused because of the lacuna in it.

“The Governors And Deputy Governors Pension Law was first enacted in 1998 as the Special Grant (Former Chief Executives) Edict. It was amended in 1999 by the Special Grant (Former Chief Executives (Amendment) Edict of 1999) and was retained in Cap. 122 Laws of Akwa Ibom State 2000.

“It was amended in 2002 by the Governors and Deputy Governors Pension Law 2002, which was later repealed by the Governors and Deputy Governors Pension Law 2006 assented to by my predecessor in office on 26th April 2007.

“In the course of its implementation, We noticed a lacuna in the 2007 law, particularly on account of its open-endedness in the provisions relating to the medical expenses and provision of funds for the employment of domestic staff for the former governors and deputy governors and working with the House of Assembly, we sought to protect the law from abuse by putting a ceiling on the medical expenses for the treatment of these senior citizens of Akwa Ibom State.

“The ceiling, which was pegged at N100 million per annum for former governors and N50 million per annum for former deputy governors, was never meant to be given either in part or in whole to anybody at anytime for any reason.

“It was meant to be paid to health institutions involved in the treatment of the former governors or former deputy governors and their spouses. It was, therefore, deliberate falsehood and organised misinformation to claim that the said money will be paid to former governors or deputy governors every year. This has never been the practice and the amendment has added nothing to give credence to this obviously politicised orchestration.”

Explaining further, Akpabio said: “In the course of its implementation, We noticed a lacuna in the 2007 law, particularly on account of its open-endedness in the provisions relating to the medical expenses and provision of funds for the employment of domestic staff for the former governors and deputy governors and working with the House of Assembly, we sought

Sunday, 1 June 2014

SouthStarNews: AVIATION:Solar plane makes inaugural flight

SouthStarNews: AVIATION:Solar plane makes inaugural flight

AVIATION:Solar plane makes inaugural flight


By Jonathan Amos
Science correspondent, BBC News
1 hour ago

The Solar Impulse 2 plane is as wide as a 747 jet but weighs less than three tonnes
A solar-powered plane that will be taken on a round-the-world journey in 2015 has taken off on its inaugural flight.

The Solar Impulse 2 vehicle lifted off from Payerne airfield in Switzerland.

It is a larger, upgraded version of the aircraft that flew across America last year with adventurers Bertrand Piccard and Andre Borschberg at the controls.

The two men want to push the boundaries for alternative energy and believe their plane can be a standard bearer.

For the maiden flight, test pilot Markus Scherdel was in the cockpit. Wheels up occurred shortly after 03:35 GMT (04:35 BST; 05:35 CEST).

It follows weeks of ground and taxi tests, which have seen the vehicle run up to near take-off speed. This had satisfied project leaders that the craft's systems were ready to go airborne.


Pilot Andre Borschberg gives a guided tour of the solar plane
The carbon-fibre aircraft has a huge wingspan, which at 72m is wider than a Boeing 747 jet. And yet, the vehicle weighs only 2.3 tonnes.

The tops of the wings are covered by 17,000 solar cells, which drive four brushless electric motors at speeds of up to 140km/h (90mph).


Piccard’s and Borschberg’s TransAmerica journey was completed last year
During the day, the solar cells will recharge lithium batteries, which can then be used to keep the plane’s propellers turning through the night.

The first Solar Impulse plane set a number of world records, including the longest manned solar-powered flight at 26 hours, the first inter-continental flight in a solar-powered plane, and the greatest distance covered on a piloted solar-powered flight. (Autonomous solar-powered drones can stay aloft for weeks).

That last record was set during Piccard’s and Borschberg’s epic TransAmerica journey in May, June and July last year.

But as challenging as that effort was, it will be dwarfed by the difficulty and complexity of completing a global flight.

This is because it will have to include passage across the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. The latter could take all of five days and nights to complete.

Only one pilot can fit in the cockpit. It has a reclining seat to make room for exercising and to permit Piccard and Borschberg, whoever is at the controls, to take short catnaps.


To make ocean crossings, Piccard and Borschberg must spend days alone in the cockpit

SUDAN RELIGIOUS DEATH SENTENCE:Meriam Ibrahim To Be Freed

Sudan Death Sentence: Meriam Ibrahim To Be Freed
Posted by: Channels Television Posted date: June 01, 2014 In: Africa | comment : 0
Sudanese authorities are to free a woman who was sentenced to death for having abandoned the Islamic faith.

Meriam Ibrahim, who gave birth to a daughter in custody, would be freed in a few days.

Abdullahi Alzareg, an Under-Secretary at the country’s foreign ministry, said that Sudan guarantees religious freedom and is committed to protecting the woman.

This comes as the United Kingdom asked Sudan to lift what it described as the “barbaric” death sentence handed down to a Christian woman accused of abandoning Islam.

A Sudanese court ruled that Mrs Ibrahim, who was raised by her Christian mother and married to a Christian, was Muslim because her father was of the Islamic faith, a line of thought which she rejects.
Culled from Channels TV