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FG orders speedy completion of N40bn, 8-lane PH-Aba highway

The Federal Government has directed the contractor handling the construction and rehabilitation works on the N40billion Port Harcourt – Aba highway project to fast track and ensure quick completion of the project.

The multibillion naira Federal project is being handled by China Civil Engineering and Construction Company (CCECC), which has assured that January 2020 delivery date is feasible.

The project supervisor, Mr. Idongesit Ebotakpan, during an inspection of the project site in Port Harcourt at the weekend, revealed that the Federal Government gave the marching order and directed that the job should be top quality.

He explained that the project, which is expected to have a 50-year lifespan would meet the best standard, stressing, “nobody is joking with the quality of job on the road.”

He revealed that the Minister of Works, Mr Babatunde Fashola, while awarding the contract, was specific that the quality of job done on the road must be world standard.

“This is a dual carriage road, the distance is from Eleme Juction to Aba that is the exact length of the project. The first contract was about N34 billion, but there were some important issues arising along the way like the issue of not taking care of road drainage after construction, so that called for a re-design of the project and the current design which is expected to consume N40 billion will take care of those setbacks.

“We have changed the whole design of the road and the present design has four lanes on both side (taking it) to eight lanes on completion, that is where we are now.

“So rehabilitation work will be from Imo bridge down to Aba, what we are doing here will also be replicated at Aba axis with four lanes making it eight lanes at the end”

The Aba/ PortHarcourt road is a very strategic road to the nation’s economy as it links Aba and other industrial heartland of the East with Port Harcourt, the nations oil hub.

The road has been in a very dilapidated state for a long time thus crippling business activities, while creating opportunities for kidnappers and bandits who take advantage of the bad state to attack traders and other road users.

Also speaking, the Project Director, Mr. Charles Okonma, lauded President Muhammad Buhari for approving the project which according to him, would alleviate the sufferings of the masses and add positive value to the economy.

His words: “One of the main policies of president Buhari administration is the economic recovery and growth plan ( ERGP), and one of the plans on that policy platform is massive infrastructural development, of which this project is one of them. You know when you improve in infrastructure you are growing the economy and when you grow the economy you take people out of poverty.”

“Works have started fully, the initial project design problems has been overcome, we will ensure that the project is completed at the stipulated time, the contractors doesn’t have any payment problems and additional funds will be made available as the project goes on’’.

The CCECC Project contractor, George Gao assured Nigerians that the project would be delivered at the agreed time of January 2020, acknowledging that the job has been properly funded by the government .

He said “We are not lacking anything in terms of funds, and from now on work has started fully. We have 41 kilometers from Aba road, Eleme junction to Imo river bridge.

“The entire length of the road we are working on is 41 kilometers. We have two registered engineer and we have 15 technicians like mechanics, carpenters, surveyors and others. The duration of this project is 30 months and we will stick to that’’.

The spokesman for Oyigbo Community, Mr. Alex Ibe, thanked the Federal Government for the project, stating that it would ensure free movement and ease traffic congestion in the ever busy expressway.

The Chairman of Nigerian Society of Engineers (NSE), Dr. Howells Hart described the project as a wonderful initiative and urge the government to do more.

Obuah appeals High Court ruling.

Chairman of Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, in Rivers State, Mr. Felix Obuah, has appealed the ruling of Rivers State High Court sitting in Port Harcourt, which dismissed his fundamental rights suit against arrest by the Police before the Court of Appeal sitting in Port Harcourt.

The lower court, last week, dismissed a suit by Obuah, in which he had asked the court to stop the Police from inviting him for questioning over the killing in Ogba/Egbema/Ndoni Local Government Area of the state during the 2015 elections, following a petition by chiefs of All Progressives Congress, APC.

However, the trial judge had dismissed the application on the ground that it was premature to run to court when he (applicant) has not been arrested or detained.

The applicant, dissatisfied with the decision of the lower court, appealed same, praying the appellate court to set aside the ruling of the lower court.

Respondents are the state Commissioner of Police, Inspector General of Police and Sa’ad Yahaya.

In the appeal, Obuah is contending, among others, that “the lower court erred in law when it declared that it will be wrongful for the respondents to arrest and detain the
appellant upon answering to the letter of invitation/petition alleging the commission of crime against him in the light of the undertaking on oath by the respondents, but failed to declare the said letter as constituting a gross violation of the appellant’s fundamental rights as provided Section 34, 35, 37, 39, 40, 41 and 42 of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1999 (as amended).”

White House shooting: Man who fatally shoots himself identified

Cameron Ross Burgess of Alabama approached the fence on Pennsylvania Avenue just before noon local time (17:00GMT) before taking out a handgun and firing several shots, police said.

The 26-year-old did not fire any rounds at the White House, authorities added.

President Donald Trump was briefed on the shooting at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida, the White House said.

Mr Trump was with First Lady Melania Trump in Florida at the time of the shooting.

Burgess, who reportedly graduated from Auburn University in 2013, had no criminal history, according to the Birmingham News.

Washington police identified Burgess in a statement on Sunday.

The man was in a large crowd when he fired the gun, the Washington Post reported, citing witnesses.

A video posted to Twitter shows many people running away from the scene.

People running at the White House

Washington police said earlier on Twitter that they sent their “natural death squad” to the scene.

Burgess was from Maylene, Alabama, a small community in the southern state.

Police outside the White House front lawn - 3 March 2018

There have been a number of security incidents at the White House in recent years.

Most recently on 23 February, a car drove into a security barrier outside the building. A 35-year-old woman was detained.

In March last year a man armed with pepper spray spent more than 16 minutes inside the grounds after jumping the fence.

Oscars 2018: The best looks from the after-parties  

The really great part of the Oscars? When the ceremony is over, and Hollywood’s real annual celebrations start – the after-parties.

And by far the most star-studded, glamorous event is the Vanity Fair after-party, attended by nominees, supermodels, media moguls and political figures.

Now in its 24th year, the Vanity Fair bash at a custom-built space near the Beverly Hills City Hall kicks off with a viewing party for stars who didn’t score a ticket to the main event.

This year, Jon Hamm walked the green and white carpet early to watch the show via a giant screen, as did Isla Fisher, Olivia Wilde, Janelle Monae, Amy Adams and Elizabeth Banks.

But every year the real excitement lies in the gowns the attendees change into so they can truly let their hair down.

When it comes to the best-dressed star of the after-parties there can be only one winner: Kate Beckinsale.

The 44-year-old Brit looked half her age in a figure-hugging Reem Acra gown that fit her so perfectly it looked to have been sewn onto her body.

Kate Beckinsale. Photo: Getty

As for the rest, here are the night’s most memorable looks.

Rosie Huntington Whiteley is about to start a pale green revolution. Who knew the tricky shade could look so good? Photo: Getty
Emma Roberts pays tribute to Old Hollywood starlets. Photo: Getty
Comedy couple Sacha Baron Cohen and Isla Fisher accessorise with their cheeky grins. Photo: Getty
Singer-turned-actress Janelle Monae suits up in a different way. Photo: Getty
Margot Robbie (in Chanel) messes around with husband Tom Ackerley. Photo: Getty
Halle Berry, 51, is clearly ageing backwards. We’ll have what she’s having. Photo: Getty
Jenna Dewan Tatum shows some leg. Photo: Getty
Comedy couple Sacha Baron Cohen and Isla Fisher accessorise with their cheeky grins. Photo: Getty
Singer-turned-actress Janelle Monae suits up in a different way. Photo: Getty
Margot Robbie (in Chanel) messes around with husband Tom Ackerley. Photo: Getty
Halle Berry, 51, is clearly ageing backwards. We’ll have what she’s having. Photo: Getty
Jenna Dewan Tatum shows some leg. Photo: Getty
Singer-turned-actress Janelle Monae suits up in a different way. Photo: Getty
Margot Robbie (in Chanel) messes around with husband Tom Ackerley. Photo: Getty
Halle Berry, 51, is clearly ageing backwards. We’ll have what she’s having. Photo: Getty
Jenna Dewan Tatum shows some leg. Photo: Getty
Jenna Dewan Tatum shows some leg. Photo: Getty
Supermodel Kate Upton proves why she’s a regular on the cover of Vogue. Photo: Getty
Music royalty Paris Jackson goes all out in lime green – and pulls it off, miraculously. Photo: Getty
Freshly married model Emily Ratajkowski shows off her post-wedding glow. Photo: Getty
Kardashian sibling Kendall Jenner is all legs, sleeves and cleavage. Photo: Getty
Gal Gadot switched her shimmering black and gold gown from the ceremony for this va-va-voom red number. Photo: Getty
Miley Cyrus and Liam Hemsworth channel their collective star power into a serious sartorial moment. Photo: Getty
Get Out star Allison Williams may have opted for structure up top, but the bottom of her dress is all about making a statement on the dancefloor. Photo: Getty
Zendaya’s nude number is fitted – but not so tight she can’t dance up a storm. Photo: Getty
Emma Watson debuts an edgy haircut and a ‘Time’s Up’ tattoo (like a temporary one). Photo: Getty
The really great part of the Oscars? When the ceremony is over, and Hollywood’s real annual celebrations start – the after-parties.

And by far the most star-studded, glamorous event is the Vanity Fair after-party, attended by nominees, supermodels, media moguls and political figures.

Now in its 24th year, the Vanity Fair bash at a custom-built space near the Beverly Hills City Hall kicks off with a viewing party for stars who didn’t score a ticket to the main event.

This year, Jon Hamm walked the green and white carpet early to watch the show via a giant screen, as did Isla Fisher, Olivia Wilde, Janelle Monae, Amy Adams and Elizabeth Banks.

But every year the real excitement lies in the gowns the attendees change into so they can truly let their hair down.

When it comes to the best-dressed star of the after-parties there can be only one winner: Kate Beckinsale.

The 44-year-old Brit looked half her age in a figure-hugging Reem Acra gown that fit her so perfectly it looked to have been sewn onto her body.

Kate Beckinsale. Photo: Getty

As for the rest, here are the night’s most memorable looks.

Rosie Huntington Whiteley is about to start a pale green revolution. Who knew the tricky shade could look so good? Photo: Getty
Emma Roberts pays tribute to Old Hollywood starlets. Photo: Getty
Comedy couple Sacha Baron Cohen and Isla Fisher accessorise with their cheeky grins. Photo: Getty
Singer-turned-actress Janelle Monae suits up in a different way. Photo: Getty
Margot Robbie (in Chanel) messes around with husband Tom Ackerley. Photo: Getty
Halle Berry, 51, is clearly ageing backwards. We’ll have what she’s having. Photo: Getty
Jenna Dewan Tatum shows some leg. Photo: Getty
Comedy couple Sacha Baron Cohen and Isla Fisher accessorise with their cheeky grins. Photo: Getty
Singer-turned-actress Janelle Monae suits up in a different way. Photo: Getty
Margot Robbie (in Chanel) messes around with husband Tom Ackerley. Photo: Getty
Halle Berry, 51, is clearly ageing backwards. We’ll have what she’s having. Photo: Getty
Jenna Dewan Tatum shows some leg. Photo: Getty
Singer-turned-actress Janelle Monae suits up in a different way. Photo: Getty
Margot Robbie (in Chanel) messes around with husband Tom Ackerley. Photo: Getty
Halle Berry, 51, is clearly ageing backwards. We’ll have what she’s having. Photo: Getty
Jenna Dewan Tatum shows some leg. Photo: Getty
Jenna Dewan Tatum shows some leg. Photo: Getty
Supermodel Kate Upton proves why she’s a regular on the cover of Vogue. Photo: Getty
Music royalty Paris Jackson goes all out in lime green – and pulls it off, miraculously. Photo: Getty
Freshly married model Emily Ratajkowski shows off her post-wedding glow. Photo: Getty
Kardashian sibling Kendall Jenner is all legs, sleeves and cleavage. Photo: Getty
Gal Gadot switched her shimmering black and gold gown from the ceremony for this va-va-voom red number. Photo: Getty
Miley Cyrus and Liam Hemsworth channel their collective star power into a serious sartorial moment. Photo: Getty
Get Out star Allison Williams may have opted for structure up top, but the bottom of her dress is all about making a statement on the dancefloor. Photo: Getty
Zendaya’s nude number is fitted – but not so tight she can’t dance up a storm. Photo: Getty
Emma Watson debuts an edgy haircut and a ‘Time’s Up’ tattoo (like a temporary one). Photo: Getty

2018 OSCARS: FULL WINNERS LIST + REVIEWS OF THE SHOW

NO UPSETS, NO DRAMA

Image

 

 

FILMS WITH MOST OSCAR WINS – 2018
1 The Shape of Water 4 wins
2 Dunkirk 3 wins

 

Unlike last year’s infamous broadcast, the 90th Annual Academy Awards went smoothly—and almost exactly as predicted—on Sunday night, with Guillermo del Toro’s fantastical romance The Shape of Water taking home a year-leading four trophies, including best picture. It was a ceremony filled with exceptionally well-labeled envelopes but free of any upsets, unless you were somehow found yourself overly invested in the short film categories.

That said, it was also a year of firsts. The Shape of Water became the only science-fiction film to win best picture, while Jordan Peele became the first black recipient of a best screenplay award. The other screenplay winner, 89-year-old James Ivory, is now the oldest recipient of a non-honorary Oscar. And the foreign-language Oscar went to Chile for the first time, for the groundbreaking transgender drama A Fantastic Woman. Less important, but a first nevertheless: Kobe Bryant is now the only NBA player to win an Oscar after picking up a trophy for his animated short.

Below, find a complete list of this year’s Oscar winners, followed by a look at how well experts and Metacritic users did with their Oscar predictions this year. You’ll also find reviews of the broadcast from a variety of TV critics.

THE WINNERS AND LOSERS

Listed below are the 2018 Academy Award winners in each of the 24 categories, compared to the consensus predictions of over 90 industry experts (more on that below).

Category Predicted Winner ACTUAL WINNER
Best Picture yn (tie between The Shape of Water and Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri) The Shape of Water
Director y Guillermo del Toro
The Shape of Water
Guillermo del Toro
The Shape of Water
Lead Actress y Frances McDormand
Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri
Frances McDormand
Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri
Lead Actor y Gary Oldman
Darkest Hour
Gary Oldman
Darkest Hour
Supporting Actress y Allison Janney
I, Tonya
Allison Janney
I, Tonya
Supporting Actor y Sam Rockwell
Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri
Sam Rockwell
Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri
Original Screenplay y Jordan Peele
Get Out
Jordan Peele
Get Out
Adapted Screenplay y James Ivory
Call Me by Your Name
James Ivory
Call Me by Your Name
Animated Feature y Coco Coco
Documentary Feature n Faces Places Icarus
Foreign-Language Feature y A Fantastic Woman A Fantastic Woman
Animated Short y Dear Basketball Dear Basketball
Documentary Short n Edith + Eddie Heaven Is a Traffic Jam on the 405
Live-Action Short n DeKalb Elementary The Silent Child
Original Score y Alexandre Desplat
The Shape of Water
Alexandre Desplat
The Shape of Water
Original Song y “Remember Me”
Coco
“Remember Me” 
from Coco
Cinematography y Roger A. Deakins
Blade Runner 2049
Roger A. Deakins
Blade Runner 2049
Film Editing y Lee Smith
Dunkirk
Lee Smith
Dunkirk
Costume Design y Phantom Thread Phantom Thread
Makeup & Hairstyling y Darkest Hour Darkest Hour
Production Design y The Shape of Water The Shape of Water
Sound Editing y Dunkirk Dunkirk
Sound Mixing y Dunkirk Dunkirk
Visual Effects n War for the Planet of the Apes Blade Runner 2049

HOW ACCURATE WERE THE PREDICTIONS?

Experts

As you can see above, our panel of 95 industry experts correctly forecast 19 of the 24 categories as a group. (We’re not counting best picture as a correct prediction, since there was no consensus pick from the experts.) That 79% accuracy rate is an improvement over last year, when the experts had just 17 correct picks (for a 67% success rate).

Three “experts” led the pack with 21 of 24 correct picks (for an 87.5% accuracy rate). That group included—for once—two actual experts in the form of The Playlist’s awards columnist Gregory Ellwood and Awards Circuit’s Clayton Davis. The other member of that top trio was ESPN’s Adnan Virk. Who performed the worst out of the experts making picks in all 24 categories? That would be The New Yorker film critic Richard Brody, who had just 11 correct picks (for a 46% success rate).

Metacritic users

As a group, Metacritic users had the same 79% success rate as the experts. But, once again, our top users outperformed the most accurate experts.

Leading the pack out of the over 5,500 Metacritic users submitting picks this year were

  1. one anonymous user (23 of 24 correct)
  2. Corey Caplan and Jack Henderson (22)
  3. 12 tied with (21), including Peter BookerAshley ChemtovJan KipBrennon MussoStephen NekyAlan OrtizShunzhi RaoAndrew Sourvanos, and Alireza Tadibi

HOW WAS THE TELECAST?

How did Jimmy Kimmel do in his repeat appearance as Oscar host, and how was the nearly four-hour broadcast as a whole? Below are selections from TV critics’ assessments of this year’s Oscars (in no particular order); click any link to read the full review. 

Indiewire Ben Travers

Kimmel just didn’t belong at the center of this celebration. It’s not his fault, even if it did feel like the perfect time for him to hand off hosting duties — or at least the monologue — to a woman, dreamer, person of color, or anyone else who truly needed to be heard and seen on Oscar night. … That being said, Kimmel’s monologue worked best when he was sincere.

CNN Brian Lowry

The Oscars are a big, unwieldy beast, which invariably try to serve too many masters. Yet if the intent was ultimately to maintain a celebratory tone without ignoring either the outside world or the elephant in the room throughout this year’s awards, host Jimmy Kimmel and the show itself largely succeeded.

The Washington Post Hank Stuever

In his second year, Kimmel has shown that the telecast needn’t be anything but sharp and sure, with a funny host whose bits are manageable, shareable and — best of all — forgotten. We’re not making showbiz history here; we’re just trying to get through another Oscar night.

Variety Maureen Ryan

All things considered, the show had a more or less low-key vibe. Normally it takes about two hours for the numbing effect to set in, but despite host Jimmy Kimmel’s best efforts, Sunday’s telecast started to feel a bit languid and low-energy far earlier.

Yahoo! Ken Tucker

A month ago, I said that the best thing Kimmel could have done was announce he was stepping aside to let a woman host this year’s Oscars. He chose not to do that, and ended up much like the statue of the Oscar he made fun of for having no reproductive organ: It was a eunuch’s performance.

San Francisco Chronicle David Wiegand

Even the hope that the noise of clapping might keep the audience at home and in the theater awake, there was little of that for anything except the entrance of actors of advance age.

Deadline Greg Evans

Did the nearly four-hour running time contain any moments for the Oscar ages? Probably not.

Time Daniel D’Addario

The fundamentals of the ceremony, despite dashes of energy that felt risky and daring, had changed little even as the industry the ceremony honored had begun to change a lot. Jimmy Kimmel—who’d seemed outmatched last year by an envelope mix-up before the evening’s most anticipated award—had months to prepare for a show in the wake of the culture-shaking Harvey Weinstein revelations. And he seemed to have spent those months brainstorming how not to address anything at all.

Vanity Fair Richard Lawson

As a host, Kimmel struck a careful, appropriately measured tone … All told, Sunday’s ceremony did an admirable job of recognizing all the turmoil surrounding it while maintaining the silly, chintzy trappings that so many of us tune into the Oscars for. Both cloying and clever, gassy and game-faced, these Academy Awards did the best they could to address difficult things, short of canceling the whole thing and airing some kind of P.S.A. Awards shows are not the best events to turn to for sharp, complicated discourse.

NPR Linda Holmes

The broadcast itself seemed as tame as the winners’ list.

The Oregonian Kristi Turnquist

Was it respectful? Absolutely. Did it make for kind of a dull, earnest Oscars show. Yeah, kind of.

The Hollywood Reporter Daniel Fienberg

How did Kimmel do overall? With the exception of the theater stunt and two unnecessary toss-off Matt Damon jokes — Kimmel really can’t resist — I thought he was good, probably even better than last year. The monologue wasn’t spectacular, but he was more present throughout the show than some hosts tend to be, perhaps because an astounding amount of filler time was built in.

Vulture David Edelstein

This was the best, most inspiring, and most sheerly likable Academy Awards telecast I’ve ever seen. … It was also — in terms of the actual awards — among the most disappointing.

Gold Derby Tony Ruiz

Thanks to a superb sophomore hosting job by Jimmy Kimmel and a significant nostalgia factor, this year’s Oscar ceremony was a well-paced celebration of the best of Hollywood.

British ex-spy reveals Kremlin blocked Trump from naming Mitt Romney as secretary of state: report

Former MI6 spy Christopher Steele has reportedly told special counsel Robert Mueller that he believes the Russian government directly intervened to block President Donald Trump from appointing Mitt Romney as his secretary of state.

In New Yorker profile of Steele published Monday, reporter Jane Mayer writes that Steele — who authored the infamous Fusion GPS dossier alleging deep ties between President Donald Trump and the Russian government — wrote a memo in late 2016 claiming that Russia worked to stop then-President elect Trump from making noted Russia hawk Romney his chief diplomat.

“This memo, which did not surface publicly with the others, is shorter than the rest, and is based on one source, described as ‘a senior Russian official,’” writes Mayer. “The official said that he was merely relaying talk circulating in the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, but what he’d heard was astonishing: people were saying that the Kremlin had intervened to block Trump’s initial choice for Secretary of State, Mitt Romney.”

As Mayer notes, however, Trump had plenty of reasons to reject Romney as his secretary of state other than his views on Russia, including Romney’s own blistering criticism of Trump during the 2016 presidential campaign. Trump did eventually pass over Romney and instead named former ExxonMobil CEO Rex Tillerson as his top diplomat.

Draw game saddens Eze

Former Kano Pillars defender Stephen Eze, has expressed his dissatisfaction with the result of their game against Botev Plodiv on Sunday.

Lokomotiv Plodiv played out a goalless draw with Botev Plodiv, in a keenly contested tie with Stephen Eze nullifying all the attacking threat of Botev.

Eze joined Lokomotiv after an outstanding performance for the home-based Eagles at the recently concluded African Nation Championship in Morocco.

Former FC Ifeanyi Ubah defender, expressed feelings on his Instagram page on Monday morning and he also appreciates fans for their support.

“DRAW, we would have loved a win but we take the point against #Botevplodiv and move on. The atmosphere at the stadium was electric and the support of our fans kept us going till the last minutes!

“Thank you for the encouragement. We promised to be back with our finest football for the next game against #septemvri”.

Eze joining Lokomotiv Plodiv made it three Nigerians on the payroll of the club, with others include Mustapha Musa and Abdulahi Musa.

INEC, a threat to democracy – PDP

The opposition Peoples Democratic Party has described the declaration by the Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission(INEC), Professor Mahmood Yakubu, that there are no underage voters in Kano State as despicable and an act of cowardice that threatens Nigeria’s democracy.

In a statement signed by the National Publicity secretary of the party, Kola Ologbondiyan, the PDP said that INEC Chairman is allowing the All Progressive congress (APC)-led Federal Government to push him to make such false declaration, despite manifest documentary evidence in the public domain and even by INEC officials.

The party said that the actions of the INEC Chairman cast a huge doubt on the sincerity of the commission to conduct  free, fair and credible elections come 2019.

It said: “INEC has obliterated a huge part of its honour by denying what is obvious to all instead of taking urgent steps to clean up the register and correct all anomalies ahead of 2019 general elections.

“When Professor Yakubu set up his committee of handpicked officials, instead of deploying stakeholders comprising of political parties and credible NGOs, the PDP immediately alerted of a grand design to use the panel to arrive at a predetermined finding and cover the illegality for the APC. Today, we have been vindicated.

“We invite Nigerians and the international community to note the sequence of plots by INEC and the APC to hide the existence of underage voters in Kano and Katsina States.

“Nigeria will recall that when the issue first came to the fore, the APC mounted a staunch and unyielding defence for INEC, thus betraying their vested interests in the illegality”

The PDP maintained that the APC is only setting up INEC against Nigerians and cautioned the Chairman not to allow himself to be used to throw the nation into chaos.

Aid workers pull out of Rann

Humanitarian workers of the United Nation (UN) and Doctors Without Borders have been pulled out of Rann after an attack by Boko Haram militants killed at least three aid workers.

Three UN aid workers, four soldiers and four mobile police were among the dead while another UN aid worker is missing in the attack.

The UN Secretary General, António Guterres, announced the evacuation of all humanitarian personnel and the temporary suspension of all humanitarian deliveries in the area.

Condemning the incident, the UN chief recalled that attacks targeting civilians and civilian infrastructure violated international humanitarian law as he called on the federal government to apprehend and prosecute attackers.

“Those responsible for these and other atrocities in Nigeria must be apprehended and prosecuted,” the UN scribe said.

“At the time of the attack, over 40 humanitarian workers were in Rann. All humanitarian personnel have been evacuated from Rann, and all humanitarian deliveries in the area have been temporarily suspended.”

The Secretary-General expressed his deepest condolences to the affected aid workers, their families and to the Government and people of Nigeria and wished those injured a swift recovery.

In the same vein, Doctors Without Borders, in a statement, also announced medical activities in Rann were suspended and 22 Nigerian and international staff evacuation.

“We are deeply shocked by the loss of three humanitarian colleagues in Rann,” said Doctors Without Borders International President Dr. Joanne Liu in the release.

“These tragic deaths reflect the ruthless violence which the people trapped in Borno face daily.”

The statement also quoted Kerri Ann Kelly, Doctors Without Borders emergency coordinator in Nigeria.

“Leaving our patients, which include 60 children currently enrolled in our nutrition program, without medical assistance, is an extremely painful decision,” she said

“We will continue to evaluate how the situation evolves and we will return as soon as the conditions allow.”

The killer disease with no vaccine

Since the beginning of the year, Nigeria has been gripped by an outbreak of a deadly disease. Lassa fever is one of a number of illnesses which can cause dangerous epidemics, but for which no vaccine currently exists.

Lassa fever is not a new disease, but the current outbreak is unprecedented, spreading faster and further than ever before.

Health workers are overstretched, and a number have themselves become infected and died.

The potentially fatal disease is a so-called “viral haemorrhagic fever”, which can affect many organs, and damage the body’s blood vessels.

But it is difficult to treat.

Most people who catch Lassa will have only mild symptoms such as fever, headache and general weakness. They may have none at all.

However, in severe cases, it can mimic another deadly haemorrhagic fever, Ebola, causing bleeding through the nose, mouth and other parts of the body.

About 1% of cases are thought to be fatal, but women who contract the disease late in pregnancy face an 80% chance of losing their child, or dying themselves.

More than 1,000 suspected cases of Lassa have been reported across Nigeria since January, according to the country’s Centre for Disease Control.

About 90 people are thought to have died so far, but the true number may be much higher, because Lassa is so hard to diagnose.

In the early stages it’s almost impossible to distinguish from other common diseases like malaria and dengue.

With no readily available test, the only way to confirm a diagnosis is to analyse a blood or tissue sample in one of small number of specialised laboratories.

The disease was first identified in the Nigerian town of Lassa in 1969, after an outbreak in a mission hospital.

It has since been seen in many West African countries including Ghana, Mali and Sierra Leone.

However, this outbreak is causing particular concern because the number of cases is unusually high for the time of year.

Health officials are working to understand why.

Outbreaks can be influenced by seasonal weather conditions, which affect the numbers of the virus’s natural host – the multimammate rat.

These small mammals are common across West Africa, where they easily find their way into homes.

Another possibility is that the high number of cases reflects heightened public awareness.

Or it’s possible that something about the virus has changed.

Most people catch Lassa fever from anything contaminated with rat urine, faeces, blood or saliva – through eating, drinking or simply handling contaminated objects in the home.

It can also pass from person to person through bodily fluids, meaning healthcare workers and people taking care of sick relatives without protective equipment are particularly at risk.

The incubation period for Lassa is up to three weeks. Researchers are trying to work out whether – like Ebola – Lassa can stay in the body and be passed on through sexual contact even after illness subsides.

Nigeria has a strong public health system, and is used to dealing with epidemics like this.

The World Health Organization (WHO) is working with Nigerian authorities to help coordinate the response and the UK government has deployed a team of experts from its Public Health Rapid Support Team.

Those living in affected areas are being advised to take basic precautions: blocking holes that may allow rats to enter their homes, disposing of rubbish in covered dustbins, and storing food and water in sealed containers.

People are advised to wear protective gloves when caring for anyone who may have Lassa fever, and to carry out safe burial practices.

Despite these measures, the fight against Lassa – and other infectious diseases – is hampered by a lack of effective medical tools like diagnostic tests, treatments and vaccines.

It is likely that a vaccine could be found for Lassa – reducing the possibility of an outbreak becoming a global health emergency – but as with other epidemic diseases that mainly affect poorer countries, progress has stalled.

Vaccine development is a long, complex and costly process. This is especially true for emerging epidemic diseases, where a prototype vaccine can usually only be tested where there is an outbreak.

A new organisation called CEPI (Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations) – set up in 2017 with financial support from the Wellcome Trust, national governments and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation – hopes to accelerate vaccine production.

Lassa is one of the diseases on its hit list and it’s hoped one or more promising vaccines will be ready for large-scale testing in the next five years.

The WHO has drawn up a list of other serious, but often poorly understood diseases, with the potential for devastating outbreaks, including MERS, Nipah, Rift Valley Fever and, of course, Ebola.

It plans to highlight gaps in our knowledge of these diseases and to begin further research.

But research alone isn’t enough.

Stronger health systems are needed in the countries where epidemics are most likely to arise.

This could mean building better healthcare facilities and training staff to recognise and respond to outbreaks.

It will also mean working with communities to understand how to identify outbreaks at an early stage and prevent their spread.

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