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Tuesday, 5 November 2013

Pregnant mother of two, 7 others paraded as robbery suspects

The Lagos State Police Command, yesterday, paraded eight armed robbers, who were said to have killed two Policemen and wounded several others at Iju-Ishaga area of the state.

Among the suspects is a married woman, Taiwo Obafunsho, 28, a mother of two who is also three months pregnant.
Obafunsho said that she knew the gang through one of their girlfriends called Shade, who she met at Mushin where she has a shop.The other suspects are Ife Olubaba, 29 who is the alleged gang leader; Saheed Wasiu, 23; Sedu Idowu 20; Wasiu Rafiu, 23; Odelade Kabiru, 26; Waliu Sanni, 29, and Taiye Agege said to be dead.

The suspects.

The suspects.


The suspects were found with two AK-47 rifles, one automatic pump-action gun, four locally-made pistols, two fully-loaded AK-47 magazines, 135 live cartridges and a Hyundai Tucson sports utility vehicle, number plate MUS 350 BG.

Confessions:
Rafiu said: “The first operation we went for was at Agege and I was given N10,000. I was arrested at Oshodi.“I did not know anything about it. But because they saw Taiye and me together, I was arrested. I did not even know what was happening. I did not follow them during the second operation.”Another suspect, Sanni, said they took three vehicles for the operation, but that they did not find anything or any body to rob.

The Police Public Relations Officer, PPRO, Ngozi Braide, confirmed the incident, stating that it was a follow-up to what happened on November 3, where some robbers attacked policemen attached to Iju Police Station in Lagos at 3a.m.
She said: “On October 9, when a group of armed robbers carted away two police riffles, the Commissioner of Police, Umar Manko, directed the officer in charge of SARS Ikeja, SP Abba Kyari, to launch a massive manhunt for the robbers and recover the snatched rifles.“Police efforts paid off when eight of the armed robbers, led by one Ife Olubaba, a boy to Godogodo, kingpin of South-West armed robbers, were arrested at various locations in Lagos and Ogun states.
“During the exchange of fire between the armed robbers and crack SARS operatives, one Taiye Agege was fatally wounded.”She said all the arrested suspects confessed to have taken part in the Iju operation, where Policemen were fired.

She said efforts were on to arrest the remaining gang members.



#vanguard

Fire guts 25-storey Great Nigeria House

No fewer than three persons were, yesterday, injured in a fire that engulfed a 25-storey building on 45 and 47 Martins Street, Lagos Island Local Government Area, owned by the Great Nigeria Insurance Company Limited, popularly called Great Nigeria House.

More than 200 traders occupying the building were displaced, as business activities around Oluwole Market and other adjourning streets were paralysed and property worth billions of naira destroyed in the inferno.
Hundreds of bystanders and staff of corporate organisations in the building watched helplessly as fire service men battled to put out the fire.

Great Nigeria Insurance Company Limited, popularly called Great Nigeria House on  fire.
Great Nigeria Insurance Company Limited, popularly called Great Nigeria House on fire.


A senior officer of the Federal Fire Service identified as Mr. Obiah Onoh was, however, manhandled by the angry mob for the service’s alleged late response to distress calls.
Vanguard gathered that about three cars parked on the second floor of the building were also burnt by the fire, which started at 6a.m. on the first floor and spread to the third floor of the over 30-year-old building.
Officials of the Federal and LagosState fire services, National Emergency Manage-ment Agency, NEMA, their LagosState counterpart, LASEMA, and other emergency management agencies were still battling the fire at 3:30p.m., nine hours after the outbreak.
It was further learnt that the fire was made worse by  inflammable goods stocked in the building, especially air conditioners, rubber foot wear among others.

‘How it started’
Mr. Olawale Ajayi, a trader, said: “I operate a shop here, and my shop is on the third floor. I was already here about few minutes before 6a.m.
“Suddenly, we heard sounds of footsteps, an indication that people were running. They started screaming to alert us of the fire on the first floor.
“I cannot say what caused the fire. All I can say is that five minutes after PHCN restored power, we saw a thick smoke.
“Before we could do anything, the entire first floor of the building was already engulfed.”

‘I lost N2.5 million’
Speaking to Vanguard, Mr. Kingsley Ogochukwu, a trader, said: “I sell footwear in this building. I received the call at about 7a.m. All my goods have been burnt.
“I have a shop on the third floor, while my warehouse is on the 10th floor. I re-stocked last week in anticipation of Yuletide season sales.
“I have lost N2.5 million worth of goods and N20,000 cash. This excludes the goods I sold to some of the traders on the first floor, which they have not paid for.
“I don’t know how to describe this because we have over 200 traders on the affected floors and none of us have goods less than a million.
“For instance, my friend also lost over N15 million because his warehouse and shop were on the first and third floors, respectively.”

‘I lost everything’
Mr. Daniel Ebhefu, one of the traders on the first floor, said: “I have lost all my investments.
“All I can say is that the country’s fire fighters aren’t effective. There is need to improve. If not for the assistance from a commercial bank and a construction firm, they couldn’t have contained the fire.
“I was at home when I received the call that my shop has been affected. When I got here, the fire was still at the first floor, where it started.
“They have not been able to put off the fire and it has extended to the second and third floors.”

3 injured
Mr. Babatunde Jimoh, an eyewitness, said: “I was one of the early persons to arrive. We entered the building at about 9a.m. to remove some of the cars parked on the second floor.
“After we had succeeded in removing five cars, we couldn’t withstand the thick black smoke.
“We decided to leave. As we approached the first floor, the smoke increased. While I was able to escape unhurt through the entrance, my friends Yusuf Adeshina and Mueez could not go through the fire.
“They, therefore, jumped from the first floor and sustained injuries. Another trader also sustained injuries while trying to escape from the inferno.

NEMA confirms attack on fireman
NEMA Information Officer, Mr. Ibrahim Farinloye, said: “The mob attacked Obiah at 10a.m., while he was trying to put out the fire.
“I don’t know why they attacked him because at that time he was busy removing some fire-fighting equipment from the truck. He has been taken to the hospital for treatment.”
Director, Lagos State Fire Service, Rasak Fadipe, said that the service received a distress call 6:34a.m.
Mr. Ganiyu Olayiwola, Operational Commander, Federal Fire Service, who spoke with Vanguard, said the cause of the inferno could not be immediately ascertained.
He added that there would be an investigation into the cause of the fire and the damage done to the property.



#vanguard

Shopping complex Collapses in Lagos killing an unspecified number of people

      
The collapsed building
 

A shopping complex under construction at Muri Okunola Street, Victoria Island, Lagos collapsed on Monday afternoon, killing an unspecified number of people.
Eyewitnesses said the structure, believed to belong to Eti-Osa Local Government, was being converted into a shopping complex.

Artisans were said to be carrying out the casting of the beams when the structure caved in.

Fire service and security personnel rushed to the scene and embarked on a search and rescue operation.

More details later.
 
 
#dailytimes.com.ng

Monday, 4 November 2013

VIDEO: Get long, lean limbs in three simple steps + cellulite busters

His internationally renowned Clean & Lean diet has picked up a host of celebrity fans, from supermodels Elle Macpherson and David Gandy, to actor Hugh Grant and Victoria's Secret model Rosie Huntington-Whiteley.
And now fitness guru-to-the-stars James Duigan has updated and re-released his healthy living plan for everyone on Kindle this month, promising to banish yo-yo dieting forever and give you the streamlined body of which you've always dreamed.
Duigan has filmed a series of exclusive exercise videos, each targeting a specific problem area.
British model Rosie Huntington-Whiteley is a staunch supporter of James Duigan's Clean & Lean diet plan
British model Rosie Huntington-Whiteley is a staunch supporter of James Duigan's Clean & Lean diet plan



In today's short video, Duigan reveals three exercises which he promises will give you perfect legs.
The disco lunge is his favourite exercise. It's also the favourite of supermodels the world over. Great for posture, great fat burner, engages tummy and tones legs. Stand tall with thumbs up - a fab way to engage deep postural muscles - as you lunge forward throw arms back.
 
The drop lunge is a great way of stretching through the hip and working the bottom at different angles which keeps your body guessing and burns more fat. It's also great for stability and keeping your joints healthy and safe. Make sure you keep your tummy engaged and your hips stay facing forward.
The single leg Romanian dead lift is not as scary as it sounds. It is brilliant for improving stability and toning the bottom. Maintain perfect posture throughout and keep your tummy drawn in so that your spine stays safe.
The three exercises are easy-to-do and can be carried out anywhere at any time.

VIDEO: Get long, lean legs like Rosie in three stepsCLICK HERE TO WATCH VIDEO






Fan: Rosie Huntington-Whiteley has been following Duigan's Clean & Lean plan for years
British model David Gandy ialso a fan of the Clean & Lean plan
Rosie Huntington-Whiteley has been following the Clean & Lean plan for years, and David Gandy is also a fan


And although it's loved by supermodels, Victoria's Secret girls and film stars, Duigan says that the real magic is that is can work for anyone, from housewives to office workers - and everyone in between.
Huntington-Whiteley met James several years ago and is such a fan that she penned the introduction to his book Clean& Lean: Flat Tummy Fast.
Rosie said: 'James knows exactly how I want my body to look: lean, taut and strong, yet soft, curvy and feminine.
'What I've learned through working with James is that by focusing on creating a healthy body you can really achieve all of these things, faster than I ever thought possible.'
Common sense: James Duigan's Clean & Lean plan has become beloved not only by supermodels the world over, but regular men and women, mothers, office workers etc, looking for a sustainable way to live healthily
James Duigan's Clean & Lean plan is loved by supermodels and anyone who wants to detox and tone up

James Duigan on: CELLULITE BUSTERS

  • Eat organically. It means zero chemicals to toxify your body. This is particularly important when it comes to meat, fish and dairy.
  • Cut back on coffee. Caffeine makes cellulite worse. Your daily coffee is a contributor to slowing down your detoxification pathways including your liver (the main organ responsible for detoxing and burning fat). One cup a day is fine, but any more and you’ll increase your chances of getting cellulite.
  • Ditch refined carbs. Eating crisps, chips, breads and wheat-based breakfast cereals not only adds loads of calories to your diet, but also contributes to cellulite because of the bad fats they contain.
  • Eat antioxidant-rich fruits. Dark berries (such as blueberries, blackberries and raspberries) contain high amounts of antioxidants. Also, if you can get it, the acai berry from Brazil has a higher level of antioxidants than any other known food and is a great cellulite blitzer.
  • Drink green tea. This contains massive amounts of antioxidants. It’s also an excellent alternative to coffee and helps detox your whole body.
  • Regular exercise helps to promote blood flow and increase your lean muscle mass. The more lean muscle mass, the less fat/cellulite you will have.


The diet has never been advertised, but those who follow it (and who follow Duigan's workouts, which he teaches from his London gym Bodyism, recently voted as best in the business by Tatler) become enthusiastic to the point of fanaticism, making the Clean & Lean plan popular through word of mouth alone.
It recommends you rely on natural, nutritious foods to give you energy rather than a roller coaster of unnatural highs provided by sugar and caffeine, that invariably end in a crash that will have you reaching for the next stimulant, whether that be coffee, carbs, sweets or wine. That means, yes, ditch the booze.
Go for fresh food, as close to its natural state as possible - no refined sugar, which Duigan describes as like a 'toxic fat bomb' for your waistline.
Cut back caffeine to one cup of coffee in the morning, which will help to banish cellulite.
The revised and updated Clean & Lean plan can be downloaded onto Kindles or iPhones and iPads using the Kindle app.

WHAT MAKES FOODS CLEAN?

An apple in a bowl still resembles the apple on the tree - James says that makes in 'clean'
An apple in a bowl still resembles the apple on the tree - James says that makes in 'clean'

Clean foods are those that:
  • Haven't changed much from their natural state - an apple in a bowl still resembles the apple on the tree, whereas a crisp (having been heavily processed) looks nothing like a potato.
  • Don't need any added artificial flavour.
  • Don't last for months and months; they go off in the fridge or cupboard after a short while.
  • Generally contain fewer than five or six ingredients.
  • Have no ingredients you can't pronounce or recognise.
  • Don't list sugar as their main ingredient (or as one of the first three).
  • Don't make you feel bloated, gassy or uncomfortably full.
  • Satisfy you, so you're not hungry after eating them.




#dailymail

Lonely divorcee conned out of £30,000 by Ghanaian posing as U.S soldier

  • The lonely divorcee hoped to meet someone on datingagency.com
  • Kathleen was intrigued by a handsome, educated officer who got in touch
  • Colonel Allman told her he loved her - then asked for £30,000
  • Besotted, the 68-year-old raised the money from her son and a friend
  • Eventually, Kathleen realised she had been duped, but...
  • Authorities haven't been able to find the scam artist or recover her money

Tricked: Kathleen was conned by a Ghanaian using a photo of an uninvolved U.S. General
Tricked: Kathleen was conned by a Ghanaian using a photo of an uninvolved U.S. General



Kathleen Fortun snapped shut her suitcase and headed for her front door. With passport in hand and butterflies in her stomach, she jumped into a taxi to begin a journey to Gatwick Airport that would end in Los Angeles - and the arms of her new love.

Eagerly anticipating her arrival was Colonel Richard Allman, a 61-year-old military official in the U.S. Army.

Handsome, educated and eloquent, the distinguished soldier had exchanged hundreds of heartfelt emails with the lonely 68-year-old British divorcee since they were matched on a dating website five months earlier. So desperate was her paramour to lay eyes on his new love that he had insisted on booking her plane ticket so they could meet face to face.

Imagine her confusion, then, when Kathleen, a retired secretary, arrived at British Airway's booking office in December 2012 to discover staff had no record of a ticket in her name - for that day, or any other.

'I felt rising panic and then a deep, sick feeling settled inside,' recalls Kathleen. 'I went home, picked up my iPad, which had all my emails on it, and headed for the police station.'

There, a kindly police officer confirmed her mounting suspicions.

'He said "I think we've got to be realistic - it seems this Mr Allman is a con",' she recalls. 'I was humiliated, utterly heartbroken.'

She also felt utterly foolish, for when police gave Kathleen a folder showing a selection of the pictures such con-artists use regularly to fool women like her, she soon spotted the very photo 'Colonel Allman' had sent her, purportedly of himself.


'I've since found out the photo is of Wesley Clark - a former general in the U.S. Army who retired in 2000,' she says. 'Apparently anybody could have downloaded a photo of him.'

Whoever she had been corresponding with for months was, in all probability, a West African scam artist. Possibly even a gang of fraudsters.

Either way, the cruel deception that had been carried out on Kathleen was not just of the emotional kind. She was the victim of a tale she confesses she has read many times before: a plot to con a lonely heart out of money - in her case, a staggering £36,000.

But to compound her misery and shame, £10,000 of that money had come from the youngest of her two sons - one a 48-year-old doctor and the other a 45-year-old accountant.



Lonely: In 2012, Kathleen, a divorcee, joined datingagency.com hoping she might meet someone



And although she raised a further £6,000 for 'Mr Allman' by draining her life savings, the final £20,000 came from a trusting friend, also a pensioner, who Kathleen essentially conned herself. Today, she confesses that she tricked him into believing he was lending to one of her sons to help him through a redundancy.

'I didn't want him to think I was one of those stupid women,' she says. 'But deep down I must have known how improbable the truth actually sounded. The guilt I feel now is indescribable. He's not a rich man and is devastated that I betrayed his trust.'

Ten months on - with police unable to unravel the trail of bank transactions the fraudsters convinced Kathleen to make - she is resigned to the fact that this money has gone forever.

'I'm living a nightmare,' she says. 'My youngest is not speaking to me, while my eldest, who warned me it could be a scam, feels ashamed his mother could be taken in so easily.

'I am trying to pay everyone back, but I'm virtually penniless. I have a small collection of Swarovski crystal figurines that I'm selling but they're not going to make much of a dent into my debt. I look back and ask myself: how I could have been so stupid?'

It's hard not to feel for Kathleen, who was born in Lancashire and moved to affluent St Helier in Jersey in 2004, has been naive and foolish.

But she is far from alone. The most up-to-date figures reveal dating scams have pushed instances of fraud up by 27 per cent in the past year.

Just last month a mother and daughter who conned 374 victims into handing over £700,000 by posing as U.S. Army personnel on dating sites were jailed for 27 years in the States.

Kathleen, who lives in a three-bedroom granite cottage, joined datingagency.com - aimed at the over-40s - in July 2012. Having divorced in 1973 after 11 years of marriage, she'd devoted herself to raising her sons.

Five years ago, she retired and felt it was time for a fresh start. 'I had friends and volunteered at a wildlife park but I rarely met anyone,' she says. 'I didn't want to live the rest of my life alone.'

It was perhaps this desperation to be loved that best explains Kathleen's later naivety. Cautious at first, she didn't upload a photo, but wrote a profile describing herself as an 'attractive, lonely divorcee looking for gentleman in a similar position with a view to friendship.'



Conned: The internet scam artist used this photo of uninvolved U.S. General Wesley Clark to gain Kathleen's trust



Within two days she had a message from Richard Allman, a very promising-sounding gentleman indeed. 'He said he was 61 and an officer in the American Army,' says Kathleen. 'Born and brought up in London, his family had moved to California when he was 17. He said that he'd travelled the world and was currently stationed in Afghanistan.'

Allman said his wife had been killed in a car crash eight years ago. Though he had a son who lived in California, he was planning to move to London for a fresh start of his own.

Although Kathleen received messages from other men, Richard struck her as most sincere, and they began emailing several times a day. 'I told him why my marriage had gone wrong and how proud I was that my sons had grown into such fine men,' she says.

'When I said I found life on my own hard, he would say, "You deserve better. You must live life to the fullest. Put the past behind you".

'He seemed kind, passionate and caring - and had an almost poetic way with words. "After the rain, there is always the sunshine," he said. He wrote in perfect English. I saw no reason to doubt him.'

A few days after they began writing, Allman sent Kathleen a photo. When she saw the distinguished man behind the emails, she was delighted.

'I liked the fact he was a man in uniform,' she says. 'He had kind eyes and a wonderful smile. As we continued to write to each other I found myself trusting him, and anticipating his next email.'

Kathleen sent a framed photo of herself to Allman at an address in Afghanistan. 'He said I was beautiful and that he had it displayed on his desk in his quarters. He even said, "I look at it every night before retiring". It made me so happy.

'By then we'd been emailing for six weeks and he told me how much he loved me. I was developing feelings for him, too, but the last thing I wanted was to get hurt.'

Although Kathleen would have loved to speak to Allman on the phone, a bout of meningitis left her with hearing problems that make telephone conversations impossible.

She was worried this might put him off, but he said it made no difference.


'He wrote, "I can't wait to wake up one morning and find you sleeping beside me. What a wonderful life we could have together",' recalls Kathleen. 'I did worry he was rushing things, but it was hard to resist.'

Indeed, Kathleen was swept up in Allman's suggestion that they should meet when he was next on leave and stay in the house he owned in London. There was talk of spending Christmas in California with his son.

But when she mentioned it to her own eldest son, he sounded the first note of caution. 'He told me, "Whatever you do, don't send him any money",' Kathleen recalls. 'Although a little voice had been telling me Richard had to be too good to be true, it was the first time I had actually considered he might not be who he said he was.

'That evening I emailed him asking, "Are you real?" and he sent me a copy of a passport with his photo on it, making me feel guilty for hurting his feelings. That seemed like concrete proof to me. He reassured me further by saying when we met, he would prove how real he was.'

'I told my sons and friends that that this was it: I had finally met someone. They were as excited as I was about the prospect of me beginning a new life.'

It was around this point - two months after they first 'met' online - that Allman emailed Kathleen telling her his bank account had been frozen for 'security reasons'.

'He had left luggage containing secret Army papers in Ghana for safekeeping, but it had been impounded by the corrupt government there, and they were demanding £30,000 to have it released,' says Kathleen. 'Bells should have rung but he sounded so convincing.

'I'd fallen for him, and he never asked for cash, he just seemed to be confiding in me. Foolishly, I offered to help.'


Although Kathleen didn't have anything approaching £30,000, she decided to ask her youngest son to loan her £10,000.

'He was hesitant, but I pestered: “After all these years, why would you deny your mother a bit of happiness?” After a few weeks he relented.

'Meanwhile, I told a friend one of my sons had been made redundant and he would get the money back as he had some investments coming through.'



Computer whiz: The scam artist continues to evade the authorities - it is doubtful Kathleen will ever get her £30,000 back



As Allman said he couldn't receive money in Afghanistan - for yet more security reasons - he forwarded Kathleen details of a colleague's Ghanaian account, promising he'd repay her in two weeks. She sent two instalments of £2,500 and £3,500 via Moneygram.

'There was a poster in the Post Office saying "Never send money to someone you don't know" but I told myself this was different,' says Kathleen.

After her third visit to send a further £6,000, the cashier questioned why she was depositing so much money in a Ghanaian bank account. Angry at the inference she was doing something wrong, Kathleen sent the next three cash injections via NatWest.

In little over a month Kathleen had transferred £30,000, but Allman emailed asking for a further £6,000 so he could book flights for the pair to rendezvous in London, before flying on to LA.

'I can't believe it now, but I drained my savings and even ran to the bank to make the transfer before they closed,' she says. 'Richard said he would book the tickets and sent me the reference number,' she says. 'I packed my suitcase - I'd been imagining our joyful union for weeks.'

Once the realisation dawned that this was never to be, Kathleen contacted the dating agency. It claimed it could only correspond with the police and said the website carried warnings to be careful.

NatWest tried to trace the account and liaised with the police in Ghana, but uncovered only a tangled web of falsified information.

In the following weeks, Kathleen sank into depression: 'I spent a day in bed drowning my sorrows. The only person I told was my brother, so I presume my sons found out from him - they've hardly spoken to me since.

'As for my friend, I couldn't face telling him myself, so the police informed him. He was furious, mostly because I'd betrayed his trust. I feel so ashamed.'

Yet still Allman was keen to stay in touch. 'Just three months ago he wrote "Darling, get in touch and help me". I tried to keep him sweet in the hope the police could track him down from his emails but they got nowhere. I just stopped emailing him back.'

it's too late now for recriminations. Kathleen only hopes that by sharing her story, she will prevent someone else going through similar heartache.

'I am exactly who conmen are looking for: lonely, older and vulnerable. Someone who wants to believe she could find love again.

'I wake up every morning and hope it has been a bad dream. I don't want anyone else to be so foolish.'




  #dailymail