Tuesday 25 November 2014

WICKED NANNY TO APPEAR IN COURT DEC. 8..

A nanny in Uganda is in police custody after been caught on video kicking and stomping a child after the 2-year-old was sick while eating dinner.
The nanny, named locally as Jolly Tumuhiirwe, 22, was taken into custody after Aneela Kamanzi's father, Erick Kamanzi, discovered bruises on his daughter.
Instead of confronting the nanny, Kamanzi was said to have viewed security cameras installed in the family home where he watched in horror as Tumuhiirwe dragged his daughter on to the floor before attacking her. 



The assault happened after the 2-year-old, seen being shoved off the couch in her family home in Uganda, was sick while being fed a meal by her nanny, Jolly Tumuhiirwe
The assault happened after the 2-year-old, seen being shoved off the couch in her family home in Uganda, was sick while being fed a meal by her nanny, Jolly Tumuhiirwe
Tumuhiirwe, 22, is seen standing on Aneela's back, applying all of her weight
Initially reports suggested Aneela had died as a result of the assault on November 15, but investigators said she was alive and recovering from her injuries.   
Kamanzi is then said to have beaten Tumuhiirwe 'to a pulp'. She later reported the assault to police and Kamanzi was arrested after admitting he had attacked her. 


A nanny in Uganda is in police custody after been caught on video kicking and stomping a child after the 2-year-old was sick while eating dinner.

The nanny, named locally as Jolly Tumuhiirwe, 22, was taken into custody after Aneela Kamanzi's father, Erick Kamanzi, discovered bruises on his daughter.
Instead of confronting the nanny, Kamanzi was said to have viewed security cameras installed in the family home where he watched in horror as Tumuhiirwe dragged his daughter on to the floor before attacking her. 
The assault happened after the 2-year-old, seen being shoved off the couch in her family home in Uganda, was sick while being fed a meal by her nanny, Jolly Tumuhiirwe
The assault happened after the 2-year-old, seen being shoved off the couch in her family home in Uganda, was sick while being fed a meal by her nanny, Jolly Tumuhiirwe
Tumuhiirwe, 22, is seen standing on Aneela's back, applying all of her weight

Armed with a wooden object the woman is seen repeatedly striking Aneela who lies face down on the floor
Armed with a wooden object the woman is seen repeatedly striking Aneela who lies face down on the floor
Taking a run up, Tumuhiirwe kicks the girl directly in the ribs, sending her sliding across the floor
Taking a run up, Tumuhiirwe kicks the girl directly in the ribs, sending her sliding across the floor
Aneela can be seen a good few feet from where she lay before her nanny kicked her in the side
Aneela can be seen a good few feet from where she lay before her nanny kicked her in the side

Aneela's father, Erick Kamanzi, was charged with attacking the nanny, but police dropped the charges against him after he showed them the security camera footage of his daughter being assaulted
Dad.


PROTEST IN U.S.A: NO INDICTMENT FOR FERGUSON POLICE OFFICER...

building on Fire.









Daren Wilson, the Policeman that Shot Brown.

Gunshots rang out and buildings burned in a
Midwestern suburb after a grand jury decided on Monday not to indict a white
police officer over the fatal August shooting of an unarmed black teenager,
sparking a fresh wave of racially tinged violence.
Overhead flights were restricted and police fired tear gas as rioters took to the
streets of Ferguson, a suburb of St Louis, looting shops and burning cars
despite appeals for restraint from President Barack Obama.
Protests were also staged in New York, Chicago, Seattle, Los Angeles, Oakland
and Washington, D.C. over a case that has highlighted long-standing racial
tensions not just in predominantly black Ferguson but across the United States.
"Murderers, you're nothing but murderers," one woman shouted through a
megaphone at officers clad in riot gear in Ferguson, Missouri, after the grand
jury's decision was announced. "Stinking murderers."
Angry crowds gathered around the police department in Ferguson after the
grand jury said there was no probable cause to charge officer Darren Wilson
with any crime in the death of 18-year-old Michael Brown, whose family also
called for calm.
St Louis police reported heavy gunfire late on Monday in the area near where
Brown was shot and killed on Aug. 9. Storefront windows were smashed, and
fires devoured buildings including a beauty shop and a pizza parlor in two
stretches of town.
Police fired volleys of tear gas and flash-bang canisters in response to the
protests, a repeat of similar unrest that erupted in the immediate aftermath of
the shooting.
Wilson could have faced charges ranging from involuntary manslaughter to first-
degree murder, and Brown's family said through their lawyers that they were
"profoundly disappointed" by the grand jury's finding.
"While we understand that many others share our pain, we ask that you channel
your frustration in ways that will make a positive change," the family said in a
statement.
Attorneys for Wilson, who has avoided the spotlight since the shooting, said he
was following his training and the law when he shot Brown.
"We recognize that many people will want to second-guess the grand jury's
decision. We would encourage anyone who wants to express an opinion do so in
a respectful and peaceful manner," the statement said.
President Barack Obama called for protesters to remain peaceful and for police
to show restraint.
"We are a nation built on the rule of law and so we need to accept that this
decision was the grand jury's to make," Obama told a televised news
conference.
"We need to recognize that the situation in Ferguson speaks to broader
challenges that we still face as a nation. The fact remains that in too many
parts of this country a deep distrust exists between police and communities of
color."
SHOTS HEARD
As protests escalated in Ferguson, a group of demonstrators mobbed a police
car, throwing rocks and knocking out its windows, prompting a group of officers
in riot gear to advance. Sounds of gunshots briefly caused police to take cover
behind their vehicles.
A Walgreens drugstore was set alight, as were several other businesses
including a Little Caesars pizza parlor. Television images showed smoke seeping
from an auto parts store. Two police cruisers were burned.
"They need to understand that when you put your son in the ground, that's a
pain that you can never overcome," said Paulette Wilkes, a 40-year-old
teacher's assistant. "People are trying to process it. I think once they process it
they will continue to burn and loot because they're angry."
In nearby University City, a police officer was shot in the arm on Monday
evening, although St. Louis County police said it may not be related to the
unrest in Ferguson.
Missouri Governor Jay Nixon called up the National Guard ahead of the
announcement to protect against the kind of rioting that flared in the weeks
after Brown was shot and killed. The Federal Aviation Administration issued
temporary flight restrictions for the city on Monday.
Some activists described the decision to preemptively activate the guard as
unnecessarily heavy-handed, particularly following complaints that police
inflamed crowds in August by responding in a heavily militarized posture with
tear gas and rubber bullets.
The grand jury, with nine white and three black members, began meeting in late
August and heard evidence that included witnesses called by the prosecution as
well as a private pathologist hired by the Brown family to review the shooting.
Nine jurors needed to agree to bring charges.
"They determined that no probable cause exists to file any charge against
officer Wilson," St. Louis County Prosecutor Bob McCulloch told reporters in
Clayton, Missouri, where the grand jury met.
McCulloch declined to say if the jury's decision was unanimous, noting that
grand jury proceedings are completely secret and that only the jury members
themselves know the details of the proceedings.
FEDERAL PROBE
A federal probe into the shooting is continuing, and U.S. Attorney General Eric
Holder emphasized in a statement that the Justice Department investigators
had not yet reached any conclusions.
"Though we have shared information with local prosecutors during the course of
our investigation, the federal inquiry has been independent of the local one from
the start, and remains so now. Even at this mature stage of the investigation,
we have avoided prejudging any of the evidence," he said.
McCulloch described a tangled mass of conflicting testimony from 60 witnesses
about what happened during the incident that led to Brown's death, but said
much of it did not square with the physical evidence.
"Many of the same witnesses acknowledged that they did not see the shooting,"
McCulloch said. "The grand jury worked tirelessly to examine and reexamine the
testimony of all the witnesses and all the physical evidence."
Lawyers for Brown's family say the teen was trying to surrender when he was
shot, while Wilson's supporters say the officer feared for his life and opened fire
in self-defense.
Witnesses disagreed on whether Brown's hands were up at the time he was
shot, McCulloch said, adding that Wilson shot at Brown 12 times. The final shot
hit Brown in the top of his head.
Brown is suspected of having stolen cigars from a nearby convenience store
shortly before the incident. He and a friend had been walking down the middle
of the street when Wilson approached them. Police said in August that Wilson
was not aware of the robbery at the time.
(Additional reporting by David Bailey in Minneapolis, Carey Gillam in Kansas
City, Fiona Ortiz in Chicago, Sascha Brodsky and Paul Thomasch in New York,
Adrees Latif in Ferguson and Will Dunham in Washington; Writing by Scott
Malone; Editing by Jim Loney, Will Dunham, Leslie Adler and Alex Richardson)

Monday 24 November 2014

A NANNY KICKING BABY MAY FACE 15YEARS IN JAIL..



African nanny secretly filmed throwing child across a room, beating her, STOMPING on her and then kicking her in the ribs after the child was sick as she ate dinner


Instead of confronting the nanny, Kamanzi was said to have viewed security cameras installed in the family home where he watched in horror as Tumuhiirwe dragged his daughter on to the floor before attacking her. 
The assault happened after the 2-year-old, seen being shoved off the couch in her family home in Uganda, was sick while being fed a meal by her nanny, Jolly Tumuhiirwe
The assault happened after the 2-year-old, seen being shoved off the couch in her family home in Uganda, was sick while being fed a meal by her nanny, Jolly Tumuhiirwe

WARNING GRAPHIC CONTENT: Nanny mercilessly beats toddler
Initially reports suggested Aneela had died as a result of the assault on November 15, but investigators said she was alive and recovering from her injuries.   
Kamanzi is then said to have beaten Tumuhiirwe 'to a pulp'. She later reported the assault to police and Kamanzi was arrested after admitting he had attacked her. 
But after showing police the security tapes of the assault on Aneela, the charges against Kamanzi, who works for an NGO in Kampala, were dropped. 
Tumuhiirwe, who had been working for the family for three month, has been charged under the Anti-torture Act and has appeared in the Nakawa Court. 
Armed with a wooden object the woman is seen repeatedly striking Aneela who lies face down on the floor
Armed with a wooden object the woman is seen repeatedly striking Aneela who lies face down on the floor
Taking a run up, Tumuhiirwe kicks the girl directly in the ribs, sending her sliding across the floor
Taking a run up, Tumuhiirwe kicks the girl directly in the ribs, sending her sliding across the floor
Aneela can be seen a good few feet from where she lay before her nanny kicked her in the side
Aneela can be seen a good few feet from where she lay before her nanny kicked her in the side
Aneela's father, Erick Kamanzi, was charged with attacking the nanny, but police dropped the charges against him after he showed them the security camera footage of his daughter being assaulted
Aneela's father, Erick Kamanzi, was charged with attacking the nanny, but police dropped the charges against him after he showed them the security camera footage of his daughter being assaulted
Initial reports suggested Aneela had died following the assault, but authorities said she was now recovering 
Initial reports suggested Aneela had died following the assault, but authorities said she was now recovering 
The nanny is said to now be confined to a wheelchair and is being fed through tubes, according to Sowentan Live
Police are considering upgrading the charge against Tumuhiirwe to attempted murder, the Afro Cosmopolitan reports.  
Tumuhiirwe is due to re-appear in court on December 8. 

COURT FREES NYANYA, ABUJA, BOMBER....

A Federal High Court in Abuja on Monday  struck out the terrorism charges instituted against the alleged mastermind of the April 14 bomb blast which killed over 75 persons in Nyanya, a suburb of Abuja, Aminu Ogwuche.



The charges were filed by the Inspector-General of Police against the suspect as part of the requirements for the extradition of the accused from Sudan, where he allegedly escaped to after the incident.

Justice Adeniyi Ademola struck out the charges on Monday on the grounds of want of diligent prosecution.
But the suspect remained in the custody of the Department of State Services.

The case since it was instituted had suffered many adjournments due to failure of the police to produce the accused, who had been in the custody of the Department of State Services since he was extradited to Nigeria.

The police and the DSS, through their respective lawyers, had also during court proceedings scrambled for the prosecution of the accused persons.
They had both claimed they were better institutions to prosecute the case than the other.
At the Monday’s proceedings, Justice Ademola  struck out the suit due to the absence of the legal representative of the Inspector General of Police in court.

“This criminal charge is hereby struck out for want of diligent prosecution by the complainant, Inspector General of Police and his prosecutor,” the judge ruled.

In a related development, the judge in a fundamental rights suit filed by Ogwuche, granted an oral application sought by his counsel, Mr. Ahmed Raji (SAN) , for family members to have access to him.

The court ordered that three lawyers from Ahmed Raji’s law firm and two of Ogwuche’s family members be allowed access to the suspect who is in DSS custody.
The DSS counsel, Mr. Clifford Osagie, and the lawyer representing the Attorney-General of the Federation, Mr. Taiwo Abidogun, who are both appearing in the suit filed by Ogwuche did not oppose the oral application.

Justice Ademola then ruled, “Three lawyers from the complainant’s counsel as well as the complainant’s wife and another family member be given access to the applicant.
“Applicant (Ogeueche) be given medical care in the respondent’s custody and referred to the National Hospital, Abuja if need be.”
The judge then adjourned the matter till December 5 for hearing of the originating motion.
Ogwueche’s counsel, Raji, had asked the court to grant his client bail through the fundamental human rights suit.
He alleged that the Attorney General of the Federation and the DSS who are the respondents in the matter, were breaching the fundamental rights of the applicant by holding him endlessly against the provision of the law.

NIGERIAN AIRPORTS AMONG THE WORSE IN.......

THREE Nigerian airports have been rated among the worst in Africa. While Murtala Muhammed International Airport, Lagos, is voted the 10th worst in Africa, the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja, and Port Harcourt International Airport, Port Harcourt were ranked the seventh and the sixth worst airports on the continent.


Other airports with dismal performance in 2014 are Khartoum International Airport, Sudan (first); Kinshasa N’djili International Airport, Democratic Republic of the Congo (second); Tripoli International Airport, Libya (third); Dar es Salaam Julius Nyerere International Airport, Tanzania (fourth); Luanda Quatro de Fevereiro International Airport, Angola (fifth); N’Djamena International Airport, Chad (eighth) and Accra Kotoka International Airport, Ghana (ninth).
This was contained in a survey conducted by The Guide To Sleeping in Airports, the website that documents information on airports and the people who sleep in them.
In a statement by the website, voters submitted stories as they relate to unfortunate airport experiences across the continent. 
  “From dirty floors and bathrooms to the regular request for bribes, travellers were unimpressed with the airports that made it onto this year’s worst airports in Africa list. 
  “Other complaints revolved around a lack of air conditioning in sweltering climates, general navigational chaos, limited yet expensive restaurant options and questionably effective security processes. 
   “While travelling through these airports, most people prefer to skip the airport sleeping experience altogether and splurge on a nearby airport hotel instead. These airports task patience of travellers,” the report stated.
   However, five airports made the list of the best in Africa. The list includes Johannesburg O.R. Tambo International Airport, South Africa, which is ranked the primus inter pares in Africa.
  This is followed by Cape Town International Airport, South Africa (second); Durban King Shaka International Airport, South Africa (third), Algiers Houari Boumediene International Airport, Algeria (fourth); and Addis Ababa-Bole International Airport, Ethiopia (fifth).
  In Europe, Charles de Gaulle airport, France was voted the worst, followed by Sheremetyevo in Moscow, which one traveller called “hell on earth.” 
   FAAN spokesperson, Mr. Yakubu Datti, has, however, dismissed the result of the survey, saying that it could not be accurate.  In a telephone interview with The Guardian, Datti said other organisations had positively rated Nigeria airports. “I am just arriving from an event where improvement of Nigerian airports has been applauded,” he said.
   He promised to provide data that would counter the result of the survey, but he did not do so until press time. 
    Several attempts made in the recent past by FAAN to improve the state of the airports through private-public partnership have been enmeshed in controversy. FAAN had at several times disagreed with indigenous concessionaires over contract terms. The recent examples are Maevis Ltd., an integrated automated service provider, and Bi-Courtney Limited, the concessionaire of the MMA2.
FAAN said the agreements were skewed in favour of the concessionaires and to the detriment of the Federal Government.
These disagreements have exposed many international passengers to hardship at both the Lagos and Abuja airports. Experience of such passengers may have contributed to the rating that Nigerian got in the survey, said a passenger, Mr. Asekun Thomas.   

Stakeholders said the contention around concessioning agreements may   prevent investors from showing interest in building aviation infrastructure in the future.