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Thursday, June 21, 2018

Graduate Senior Inspector of Fire (SIF) at the Federal Fire Service (FFS)


The Civil Defence, Fire, Immigration and Prisons Services Board (CDFIPB), is inviting applications from suitably qualified candidates for full time appointments into the vacant position below in the Federal Fire Service (FFS):

Job Title: Senior Inspector of Fire (SIF) - CONPASS 08

Location
: Nigeria
Category: Inspectorate Cadre

Academic Qualification
  • Applicants must possess Higher National Diploma or its equivalent from recognized Polytechnics/Institutions.
Statutory Requirements
  • Applicants must be Nigerians by birth
  • Applicants must possess the requisite qualifications and certificates. Any certificate or qualification not presented and accepted at the recruitment centre shall not be accepted after the recruitment
  • Applicants must be fit and present certificates of medical fitness from government recognized hospitals
  • Applicants must be of good character and must not have been convicted of any criminal offences;
  • Applicants must not be drug addicts or members of any secret society or cult
  • Applicants must not be financially embarrassed
  • Applicants must be between ages of 18 and 30 years
  • Applicants’ heights must not be less than 1.65m for male and 1.60m for female
  • Applicants’ chest measurement must not be less than 0.87 for men
  • Computer literacy will be of added advantage.
Application Closing Date
29th June, 2018.

Method of Application
Interested and qualified candidates should:
Click Here to Start Application

Note
  • Candidates should note that this Application is absolutely free!
  • Candidates are advised to print out the Referee Forms which must be dully completed and presented for sighting during screening and documentation
  • Candidates are also advised to print out and guide their acknowledgement slip which will continuously be on demand throughout the exercise;
  • Candidates are advised against multiple registrations which may lead to disqualification.

Federal Fire Service Recruitment for Fire Assistant II (FA II)

The Civil Defence, Fire, Immigration and Prisons Services Board (CDFIPB), is inviting applications from suitably qualified candidates for full time appointments into the vacant position below in the Federal Fire Service (FFS):

Job Title: Fire Assistant II (FA II) - CONPASS 04

Location:
Nigeria
Category: Assistant Cadre

Requirements
  • Applicants must be holders of GCE Ordinary Level, SSCE/NECO or its equivalent with a minimum of five (5) credits in not more than two (2) sittings, which should include Mathematics and English Language.
Statutory Requirements For Recruitment
  • Applicants must be Nigerians by birth.
  • Applicants must possess the requisite qualifications and certificates. Any certificate or qualification not presented and accepted at the recruitment centre shall not be accepted after the recruitment
  • Applicants must be fit and present certificates of medical fitness from government recognized hospitals
  • Applicants must be of good character and must not have been convicted of any criminal offences;
  • Applicants must not be drug addicts or members of any secret society or cult
  • Applicants must not be financially embarrassed
  • Applicants must be between ages of 18 and 30 years
  • Applicants’ heights must not be less than 1.65m for male and 1.60m for female
  • Applicants’ chest measurement must not be less than 0.87 for men
  • Computer literacy will be of added advantage.
Application Closing Date
29th June, 2018.

Method of Application
Interested and qualified candidates should:
Click Here to Start Application

Note
  • Candidates are advised to print out the Referee Forms which must be dully completed and presented for sighting during screening and documentation
  • Candidates are also advised to print out and guide their acknowledgement slip which will continuously be on demand throughout the exercise;
  • Candidates are advised against multiple registrations which may lead to disqualification.
  • Candidates should note that this application is absolutely free!

Federal Fire Service Recruitment for Graduate Assistant Superintendent of Fire II (ASF II)




The Civil Defence, Fire, Immigration and Prisons Services Board (CDFIPB), is inviting applications from suitably qualified candidates for full time appointments into the vacant position below in the Federal Fire Service (FFS):

Job Title: Assistant Superintendent of Fire II (ASF II) - CONPASS 08

Location:
Nigeria
Category: Superintendent Cadre

Requirement
  • Applicants must be holders of Bachelor's Degree or its equivalent from recognized Universities.
Statutory Requirements 
  • Applicants must be Nigerians by birth.
  • Applicants must possess the requisite qualifications and certificates. Any certificate or qualification not presented and accepted at the recruitment centre shall not be accepted after the recruitment
  • Applicants must be fit and present certificates of medical fitness from government recognized hospitals
  • Applicants must be of good character and must not have been convicted of any criminal offences;
  • Applicants must not be drug addicts or members of any secret society or cult
  • Applicants must not be financially embarrassed
  • Applicants must be between ages of 18 and 30 years
  • Applicants’ heights must not be less than 1.65m for male and 1.60m for female
  • Applicants’ chest measurement must not be less than 0.87 for men
  • Computer literacy will be of added advantage.
Application Closing Date
29th June, 2018.

Method of Application
Interested and qualified candidates should:
Click Here to Start Application

Note
  • Candidates are advised to print out the Referee Forms which must be dully completed and presented for sighting during screening and documentation
  • Candidates are also advised to print out and guide their acknowledgement slip which will continuously be on demand throughout the exercise;
  • Candidates are advised against multiple registrations which may lead to disqualification.
  • Candidates should note that this application is absolutely free!

Federal Fire Service Recruitment for Assistant Superintendent of Fire I (ASF I)



The Civil Defence, Fire, Immigration and Prisons Services Board (CDFIPB), is inviting applications from suitably qualified candidates for full time appointments into the vacant position below in the Federal Fire Service (FFS):

Job Title: Assistant Superintendent of Fire I (ASF I)  - CONPASS 09

Location:
Nigeria
Category: Superintendent Cadre

Requirement
  • Applicants must possess a Master's Degree or membership of a recognized professional body.
Statutory Requirements 
  • Applicants must be Nigerians by birth.
  • Applicants must possess the requisite qualifications and certificates. Any certificate or qualification not presented and accepted at the recruitment centre shall not be accepted after the recruitment
  • Applicants must be fit and present certificates of medical fitness from government recognized hospitals
  • Applicants must be of good character and must not have been convicted of any criminal offences;
  • Applicants must not be drug addicts or members of any secret society or cult
  • Applicants must not be financially embarrassed
  • Applicants must be between ages of 18 and 30 years
  • Applicants’ heights must not be less than 1.65m for male and 1.60m for female
  • Applicants’ chest measurement must not be less than 0.87 for men
  • Computer literacy will be of added advantage.
Application Closing Date
29th June, 2018.

Method of Application
Interested and qualified candidates should:
Click Here to Start Application

Note
  • Candidates are advised to print out the Referee Forms which must be dully completed and presented for sighting during screening and documentation
  • Candidates are also advised to print out and guide their acknowledgement slip which will continuously be on demand throughout the exercise;
  • Candidates are advised against multiple registrations which may lead to disqualification.
  • Candidates should note that this application is absolutely free!

THE NEWS: Antarctic researchers mark winter solstice with icy plunge

Antarctic researchers mark winter solstice with icy plunge
source: AFP

AUSTRALIAN ANTARCTIC DIVISION/AFP / George BRETTINGHAM-MOORE This handout photo taken on June 19, 2018 and released by the Australian Antarctic Division (AAD) on June 21 shows a swimming hole being prepared at the Casey research station as Antarctic researchers welcome the solstice by plunging into icy waters

Scientists based in Antarctica welcomed the winter solstice by plunging into icy waters Thursday as part of a "mad tradition" heralding the return of brighter days after weeks of darkness.

In temperatures of -22 degrees Celsius (-7.6 degrees Fahrenheit), staff at Australia's Casey research station marked midwinter's day by cutting a small pool in the thick ice before stripping off and jumping in.

Casey station leader Rebecca Jeffcoat said midwinter day -- the shortest of the year -- was the most anticipated occasion on the Antarctic calendar and has been celebrated from the time of the early explorers.

"Swimming in Antarctica's below freezing waters is something of a mad tradition, but our hardy expeditioners look forward to it, with 21 of the 26 people on station brave enough to take an icy dip this year," she said.

"Midwinter day is really important in Antarctica because it marks the halfway point of our year here on the ice and it means the sun will spend slightly longer in the sky each day."

Celebrations took place at all three of Australia's Antarctic research stations and its sub-Antarctic Macquarie Island base, with feasting, an exchange of handmade gifts, and messages from home read out.


AUSTRALIAN ANTARCTIC DIVISION/AFP / George BRETTINGHAM-MOORE This handout photo taken on June 19, 2018 and released by the Australian Antarctic Division (AAD) on June 21 shows Barry Balkin taking a dip in a swimming hole prepared at the Casey research station as researchers welcome the winter solstice


Jeffcoat, who is experiencing her first Antarctic winter, said the continent was extraordinary.

"The environment is spectacular and harsh, and we experience the most incredible range of conditions, from below freezing blizzards to auroras, or the midwinter twilight as the sun skims the horizon," she said.

"It is challenging being so far from family and friends, but we have built a really close knit community of friends on station that we'll likely have for the rest of our lives as we've shared this great experience together."

Australia currently has 75 researchers living and working on the frozen continent as part of the Australian Antarctic Program, with most of them on 12-month postings.

THE NEWS: Eurozone ministers seek end to Greece bailout odyssey

Eurozone ministers seek end to Greece bailout odyssey
source: AFP

AFP / Aris Oikonomou Finally, an end to the 'ordeal for Greece'?

Eurozone ministers will on Thursday try to resolve their differences over the terms of Greece's departure from its massive bailout programme with splits over the degree of debt relief needed by cash-strapped Athens.

If successful the talks will mark an important milestone for Europe nine years after Greece stunned the world with out-of-control debts and set the scene for three bailouts and a near collapse of the euro single currency.

Finance ministers from the 19 countries that use the single currency are seeking to agree debt relief and a sizeable cash cushion for Greece that will reassure financial markets on the ability of Athens to stand on its own.

"Tomorrow we are expecting a decision for the adjustment of Greece's debt which will mark the end of an ... ordeal for Greece, and the end of austerity," Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras said in Athens on Wednesday.

"We are very close to the moment when we we will reap the fruits of years of sacrifices and difficult efforts by the Greek people," he said.

Greece's 86-billion-euro programme was agreed in 2015 after six contentious months of negotiation and is set to end this summer, bringing the level of assistance received by Athens to 273 billion euros since 2010.

"If everything goes well we will have an exit of Greece from its programme in August, this is very good news," a senior eurozone official said ahead of the talks in Luxembourg.

"A full exit package on Thursday is 70 to 80 percent likely," he added.

As ever in the Greek debt crisis, Germany is the most resistant to debt relief and has demanded that Athens be closely tracked on reform implementation after the programme ends this summer.


 AFP / Emmanuel DUNAND I hope you don't mind if we keep a close eye on your finances


Opposite the hardliners, who also include the Netherlands and other northern eurozone countries, are France and the European Central Bank, which argue that reduced debt is crucial in order for Greece to gain the trust of the markets.

"Nobody should lose money of course," said EU Economic Affairs Commissioner Pierre Moscovici at a news briefing in Brussels on Wednesday.

"But we should collectively find a way to alleviate the debt, either by extending the maturities of existing loans, or by buying back the most expensive ones," he said.

- 'It's a pity' -

Also calling for deeper debt relief is the International Monetary Fund, whose tough-talking head Christine Lagarde will attend the talks.

The reform-pushing IMF played an active role in the two first Greek bailouts, but took only an observer role in the third in the belief that Greece's debt mountain was unsustainable in the long term.

The senior EU source said "it is a pity" that the IMF had forsaken participating in the third rescue but that the fund was involved on a technical level "and markets won't be shocked at all".

After the bailout Athens will remain on a tight leash through post-programme monitoring that officials said would be stricter for Greece than for Portugal, Ireland and Cyprus after their respective bailouts.

Under German demands, Greece's debt relief in the short-term will be conditional on the continued implementation of reforms, which if successful could inject about one billion euros to the government's underfunded budget every year.

"For Greece, the key concern is to not have a fourth programme or give the appearance of a fourth programme," an EU source acknowledged.

"But there are some reforms where there needs to be deep follow-up going forward," the source said.

The discussion on Greece will be followed by even more fraught talks over the future of the currency and an ambitious proposal by France for a eurozone budget, for which Paris this week won backing from German Chancellor Angela Merkel.

THE NEWS: Pressure on Messi against Croatia after Ronaldo scores again at World Cup

Pressure on Messi against Croatia after Ronaldo scores again at World Cup
source: AFP

AFP / JUAN MABROMATA Argentina's Lionel Messi (L) and his teammates take part in a training session in Bronnitsy, near Moscow, on June 20, on the eve of their Russia 2018 World Cup Group D match against Croatia

Lionel Messi is under increased pressure to redeem himself when Argentina face Croatia in Thursday's pivotal match after eternal rival Cristiano Ronaldo scored his fourth goal of the World Cup to send Morocco packing.

France will be looking for a second World Cup Group C win against Peru Thursday while Australia need to bounce back from their heart-breaking defeat to Les Bleus against Denmark.

Messi's teammates have rallied around their superstar captain after his spot-kick was saved in the 1-1 draw against minnows Iceland on Saturday.

Messi is bearing the weight of expectations as Argentina seek a first World Cup trophy since 1986, desperate to crown his glittering career with a major international tournament success.

However so far in Russia, Messi has been overshadowed by Ronaldo, who took his tournament goal tally to four on Tuesday with the winner in Portugal's 1-0 defeat of Morocco, which condemned the Africans to an early exit.

A defeat against the Luka Modric-led Croatians in Nizhny Novgorod could see Argentina, unthinkably, flirting with a first group stage exit since 2002.

"We are all with him, he knows that he can count on the support of all of us more than ever," said Argentina striker Paulo Dybala of Messi.

"We are here to help him every moment, and of course we will be at his side," Dybala added.

- Croatia under a cloud -


 AFP / Anne-Christine POUJOULAT France's forwards Olivier Giroud (L) and Antoine Griezmann take part in a training session in Ekaterinburg on June 20, on the eve of their Russia 2018 World Cup Group C match against Peru


Croatia secured three points in their 2-0 win against Nigeria in their opening game but enter the match under a cloud.

AC Milan striker Nikola Kalinic was sent home from Russia for reportedly refusing to come on as a substitute, though coach Zlatko Dalic claimed the AC Milan man had a back injury.

Fancied France could only edge past Australia 2-1 courtesy of an Antoine Griezmann penalty and an own goal in their Group C opener but have vowed to ramp up the intensity against Peru in Yekaterinburg.

"We took stock of what was done well or not so well and all agree that we will have to increase our physical intensity and improve our attitude in general," said France vice-captain and central defender Raphael Varane.

"Other teams (among the favourites) did not win or even lost. We won, but we know that there are things to improve on. We know what direction we need to go in."

The defeat to France mean the Socceroos are targeting a win against Denmark in Samara on Thursday to have a realistic chance of qualifying from the group stages.


 AFP/File / Jonathan NACKSTRAND Denmark's Christian Eriksen (L) and Andreas Christensen attend a training session in Vityazevo on June 18, during the Russia 2018 World Cup football tournament

Captain Mile Jedinak, who scored from the penalty spot against France, says improving on a disciplined performance and not obsessing over great Dane Christian Eriksen will be key against Denmark, who squeezed past Peru 1-0 in their opening match.

"We know (Eriksen) is a fantastic player and obviously he's got a huge role to play for them," said Jedinak.

"But we're not trying to focus on that. We'll definitely focus on them as whole and as a collective."

Wednesday's other matches saw Spain edge past Iran 1-0 thanks to Diego Costa's fortunate third goal in two matches which put them level at the top Group B with Portugal

Iran, who had a precious second-half equaliser ruled out for offside by VAR, lie just a point behind the Iberian pair and can still guarantee qualification for the knockout stages for the first time by beating Portugal on Monday.

Uruguay knocked out Saudi Arabia Wednesday with a 1-0 win which confirmed the South Americans and hosts Russia as qualifiers from Group A with a game to spare.

The result means an early exit for Mohammed Salah's Egypt who will be heading to Volgograd airport along with the Saudis for a plane home after their clash in the historic city formerly known as Stalingrad on Monday.

THE NEWS: Killing dogs for meat illegal, rules S. Korean court

Killing dogs for meat illegal, rules S. Korean court
source: AFP

YONHAP/AFP / - South Koreans have long eaten dog but in recent decades consumption has dropped

A South Korean court has ruled the killing of dogs for meat is illegal, in a landmark decision that animal rights activists said Thursday could pave the way to outlawing eating canines.

The meat has long been a part of South Korean cuisine, with about one million dogs believed to be eaten annually.

But consumption has declined as South Koreans increasingly embrace the idea of dogs as man's best friend rather than livestock, with the practice now something of a taboo among younger generations and pressure from activists mounting.

Even so it remains a legal grey area. Despite no specific ban, authorities have invoked hygiene regulations or animal protection laws that ban cruel slaughter methods to crack down on dog farms and restaurants ahead of international events such as the Pyeongchang Olympics.

Animal rights group Care last year filed complaints against a dog farm operator in Bucheon, accusing him of "killing animals without proper reasons" and violating building and hygiene regulations, and prosecutors later charged him.

He was convicted by the Bucheon City court, which ruled that meat consumption was not a legal reason to kill dogs, and fined three million won ($2,700). He waived his right to appeal.

Care lawyer Kim Kyung-eun welcomed the ruling -- made in April but with details only released this week -- telling AFP: "It is very significant in that it is the first court decision that killing dogs for dog meat is illegal itself."

The precedent "paved the way for outlawing dog meat consumption entirely", she added.

Care leader Park So-youn said her group was tracking down dog farms and slaughter houses across the country with a view to filing similar complaints against them to judicial authorities.

"Over the past decades, public discourse over dog meat consumption has shifted towards banning it," she said. "The dog meat industry will take greater heat because of the court ruling."

- Barking mad -

A lawmaker from the ruling Democratic Party introduced a bill in parliament this week that would effectively ban killing dogs for meat.

The measure would limit the slaughter of animals for food to species classed as livestock, which does not include canines.

Some 30 activists rallied outside the National Assembly on Thursday, urging it to pass the measure.

But some South Koreans object to what they describe as cultural double standards.

Dog is usually eaten in the country as a summertime delicacy, with the greasy red meat -- invariably boiled for tenderness -- believed to increase energy.


AFP / PAK YIU A vendor pulls a trolley with dog meat at the Dongkou market in China's southern Guangxi, ahead of this month's Yulin dog meat festival. Meanwhile in South Korea, a court has outlawed the killing of dogs for meat in a landmark ruling


A survey last year found that 70 percent of South Koreans do not eat dogs, but only about 40 percent believe the practice should be banned.

Similar debates have emerged in other Asian nations where dogs are eaten.

China's most notorious dog meat festival in the southwestern town of Yulin has continued to draw crowds despite international outrage.

The Bucheon court decision sparked angry protests from dog farmers, whose premises usually double as slaughter houses as the government does not license abattoirs to kill dogs.

"This is outrageous. We can't accept the ruling that killing of dogs for dog meat consumption amounts to killing animals on a whim," Cho Hwan-ro, a representative from an association of dog farms, said on YTN television.

There are some 17,000 dog farms across the country, Cho said, calling for the government to explicitly legalise dog meat consumption and license dog slaughter houses. "Otherwise, we'll fight to the end," he added.

"Dogs for eating and dogs as pets must be separated," he said, adding they were different breeds, fed differently and raised for different purposes.

"Cows, pigs, chickens and ducks are all raised to be consumed and why not dogs?" he said.

THE NEWS: Trump orders halt to family separations


Trump orders halt to family separations
source: AFP

AFP / Mandel Ngan US President Donald Trump -- flanked by Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen (L) and Vice President Mike Pence -- signs an executive order to end family separations at the border

President Donald Trump ordered an end to the separation of migrant children from their parents on the US border Wednesday, reversing a tough policy under heavy pressure from his fellow Republicans, Democrats and the international community.

The spectacular about-face comes after more than 2,300 children were stripped from their parents and adult relatives after illegally crossing the border since May 5 and placed in tent camps and other facilities, with no way to contact their relatives.

Despite the order, there was no plan in place to reunite the thousands of children already separated from their families, according to multiple US media reports citing officials from the Health and Human Services Department (HHS).

Those youngsters would remain separated while their parents were under federal custody during immigration proceedings, according to The New York Times, before officials backed off those comments late Wednesday.

"It is still very early and we are awaiting further guidance on the matter," said Brian Marriott, senior director of communications at HHS's Administration of Children and Families.

"Reunification is always the ultimate goal," he said.

Pictures and accounts of the separations sparked outrage and a rebellion among Republicans in Trump's own party, as well as international accusation that the US was committing human rights violations.

"What we have done today is we are keeping families together," Trump said as he signed the executive order. "I didn't like the sight or the feeling of families being separated."

At a later campaign-style rally of supporters in the northern state of Minnesota, he reiterated that the change does not mean a softening at the border.

"We will keep families together, but the border is going to be just as tough," he said.

Trump then accused rival Democrats of putting "illegal immigrants before they put American citizens."

For weeks, Trump had insisted he was bound by law to split the children from their parents and that only Congress could resolve the problem -- before he radically shifted gears.

His daughter and advisor Ivanka had reportedly urged her father to end the separations, while First Lady Melania Trump made a rare political plea, saying the country needs to govern "with heart."

"We want security for our country," the president said Wednesday. "And we will have that -- at the same time, we have compassion."

The order says the Department of Homeland Security -- and not the Justice and Health and Human Services Departments, as under previous policy -- would have continuing responsibility for the families.

It also suggests the government intends to hold the families indefinitely by challenging an existing statute, the 1997 Flores Settlement, that places a 20-day limit on how long children, alone or with their parents, can be detained.

That move could lead to new legal battles for the administration.

Trump said there was a need to sustain his "zero tolerance" policy to prevent crime, which he blames illegal immigrants for.

"We still have to maintain toughness, or our country will be overrun by people, by crime, by all of the things that we don't stand for and we don't want," he said.

- 'Deeply disturbing' images -


GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP / JOE RAEDLE Children and workers are seen at a tent encampment for illegal immigrant children in Tornillo, Texas, near El Paso


Earlier, as countries marked World Refugee Day Wednesday, global leaders assailed Trump for the separations.

British Prime Minister Theresa May, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, the Council of Europe and Pope Francis all took issue with the "zero tolerance" policy.

May said images of migrant children kept in cage-like units were "deeply disturbing," and the Council of Europe, a global human rights watchdog, said Trump had abdicated any claim to moral leadership in the world.

After a downturn last year, since October, the number of migrants seeking to cross the southwest US border from impoverished Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras, as well as from Mexico, has surged.

From March to May this year, more than 50,000 people a month were apprehended for illegally crossing the border from Mexico.

With the legal system swamped, the Department of Defense on Wednesday said 21 military lawyers would be seconded to the Department of Justice for about six months to help prosecute "misdemeanor improper entry and felony illegal reentry cases."

Nearly all of the arriving families, and many others, have officially requested asylum, citing the incessant violence in their home countries.


AFP / Jochen GEBAUER Map locating arrests of families at the border between the United States and Mexico, with an indication of increase in arrests since October 2017

The policy, with mandatory separation of children from adults, was announced May 7 as a deterrent.

The issue struck an emotional chord, with accounts of children screaming and crying in facilities prepared for them.

Gene Hamilton, a senior Justice Department official, said the executive order was a "stopgap" move and that Congress needs to pass new legislation to give the president more powers to fight illegal immigration.

Current laws including the Flores Settlement, he argued, simply encouraged people to enter the country with their children, expecting to be caught and then released into US society.

Democrats and Republicans had at least two bills crafted Wednesday to address broader immigration issues, but it was not clear if any had adequate support to pass.

But Democrats and rights groups were immediately critical of the plan to change the Flores Settlement.

"The Flores Settlement prohibits the indefinite detention of children -- even with their families -- and any order to undermine this critical protection will be immediately challenged in court," said senior Democratic Senator Dick Durbin.

"The Trump Administration must reverse its policy of prosecuting vulnerable people fleeing three of the most dangerous countries on earth, who are attempting to seek safe haven in America."

THE NEWS: Political milestones for women after New Zealand PM gives birth

Political milestones for women after New Zealand PM gives birth
source: AFP

POOL/AFP/File / Daniel LEAL-OLIVAS Jacinda Ardern is only the second leader to give birth while in office

New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern has become only the second leader to give birth while in office, in another milestone for women in politics.

The 37-year-old took to Instagram to reveal the birth of her daughter Thursday, but has downplayed the significance of her pregnancy.

"Plenty of women have multitasked before me, and I want to acknowledge that," she said in January.

Here are some of the other historic moments for women in government.

- Women get the vote -

New Zealand has a track record of being progressive on women's issues -- in 1893 it became the first country to give women the right to vote. Australia extended the franchise in 1902.

Major powers of the era followed later, with the United States granting women the vote nationally in 1920. Women in Britain had to wait until 1928.

Women in Saudi Arabia voted for the first time in 2015 at municipal elections.

- Elected to parliament -

Jeannette Rankin, a Republican from Montana and leading activist, was the first woman to be elected to the US Congress, in 1916.

Despite being ahead of the curve with universal suffrage, New Zealand didn't get its first female MP until 1933, while Australia elected two women lawmakers to its national parliament in 1943.

The first woman elected to Britain's House of Commons was Constance Markievicz in 1918, although as a member of the Irish republican party Sinn Fein, she did not take her seat.

- First female prime minister -

The first female prime minister was Sirima Bandaranaike, who was elected to lead Sri Lanka (then Ceylon) in 1960. She only came into politics after the assassination of her husband, then-premier Solomon Bandaranaike, but became a dominant figure, serving three terms as head of government.

Since then, several women have occupied the biggest job in their respective countries, including Margaret Thatcher of Britain, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, India's Indira Gandhi, Brazil's Dilma Rousseff and Thailand's Yingluck Shinawatra.

But yet again, New Zealand is a trailblazer in this respect -- Ardern is the third woman to be the country's prime minister, following in the footsteps of Helen Clark and Jenny Shipley.

- Leaders who have had babies in office -

Ardern is not the first female head of government to give birth in office -- that record was claimed by late Pakistani prime minister Benazir Bhutto when she had a baby girl in 1990.

On the campaign trail, Ardern, 37, had pushed back against questions about whether she intended to start a family, saying pregnancy should not affect a woman's career opportunities.

- Women in the majority -

The number of women lawmakers has increased in recent years and currently stands at 23 percent of all MPs worldwide -- but female MPs make up over half of elected representatives in the lower houses of just two countries.

In Rwanda, 61 percent of MPs are women, while in Bolivia the figure is 53 percent, according to Swiss-based Inter-Parliamentary Union, an organisation that collects data from legislatures worldwide.

- Children in parliament -

Italy's Licia Ronziulli was snapped with her six-week old child in the European parliament in 2010, and has regularly been accompanied by her little person since then -- to the joy of photographers.

Spanish MP Carolina Bescansa breastfed in her national legislature in early 2016, while the issue of juggling children and a political career hit the headlines in Australia last year when senator Larissa Waters became the first woman in the country's history to breastfeed in the chamber.

That followed new rules introduced in 2016 to create a more "family friendly" parliament in the wake of what was described as a "baby boom" among politicians.

Under previous rules, children were technically banned.

However, in more socially conservative Japan, a female politician was ejected from her chamber in November after bringing her baby into a meeting, sparking heated debate.

Yuka Ogata took her seven-month-old son to join a municipal assembly session in western Kumamoto city, but other lawmakers asked her to leave -- ostensibly because rules stipulated that only politicians, staff members and city officials were allowed to take part.

THE NEWS: Strike a pose: International Yoga Day stretches around world


Strike a pose: International Yoga Day stretches around world
source: AFP

AFP / PRAKASH SINGH Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, whose proposal for the global event won UN approval in 2014, led the way, performing his asanas with over 50,000 others in the northern city of Dehradun

Downward-facing dogs, cobras and warriors sprouted all over Asia on Thursday, including high in the Himalayas, up in the air and under the sea, for International Yoga Day.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, whose proposal for the global event won UN approval in 2014, led the way, performing his asanas with over 50,000 others in the northern city of Dehradun.

People there gathered at a sprawling forest research institute -- snakes and monkeys were removed in advance -- as far as they eye could see before dawn for the communal session involving the yoga-mad premier, an AFP reporter at the scene said.


AFP / Laurence CHU Yoga classics


"Instead of dividing, Yoga unites. Instead of further animosity, Yoga assimilates. Instead of increasing suffering, Yoga heals," Modi said on Twitter.

Other gatherings took place across New Delhi with 10,000 enthusiasts registered as well as more than 5,000 events across from the country including in Ahmedabad, Mumbai and Patna.

In the capital several hundred braved unhealthy pollution levels and hot and humid weather to lay out their mats in the Lodi Gardens park amid the Mughal tombs.

"Yoga basically comes from India, and now it's celebrated all over the world. So now the world knows the power of yoga," participant Sidharth Singh, 23, told AFP.

The largest was in Mysore in the south with more than 60,000 aficionados strutting their stuff, organisers said.

There was also floating yoga on board the Japanese naval ship JS Ise and on the Indian Navy's INS Sahyadri, both taking part in military exercises in the Pacific, the Indian Navy said.

Below the surface, photos released by the Indian military showed a submarine crew joining in, while the Air Force tweeted photos of skydiving parachute instructors in yoga poses as they tumbled to Earth.

- On top of the world -

Even higher though were members of the Indo-Tibetan border police, going through their moves on a bleak and freezing Himalayan desert plateau 18,000 feet (5,500 metres) above sea level.

Artist Sudarsan Pattnaik meanwhile created a special sand sculpture with the message "Yoga for Peace and Harmony" on a beach in the eastern city of Puri.


 AFP / ASIT KUMAR Sand artist Sudarsan Patnaik gives final touches to a sand sculpture featuring Russian President Vladimir Putin, US President Donald Trump, Prime Minister Narendra Modi, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and Chinese President Xi Jinping, at Puri beach

It featured Modi, US President Donald Trump, Chinese leader Xi Jinping, Russian President Vladimir Putin and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un all in the lotus position.

In Tokyo, around 80 people -- mainly in their 60s and 70s -- took part in a special yoga session in the Zojoji Temple, the two-storey red shrine in the shadow of Tokyo Tower.

Some 300 yogis stretched out on colourful mats for a dawn practice in a park in Myanmar's largest city, Yangon, with the glittering Shwedagon Pagoda as a backdrop.

Interest in yoga has surged in Myanmar over the past decade, as the country's growing middle class catches up on global trends once kept out under isolated military rule.


AFP / NARINDER NANU Easy if you know how: People around the world are celebrating International Yoga Day, though not everyone will manage this pose


"Now yoga is popular around the country," yoga teacher Khin Mg Swe, 69, who organised the event, told AFP.

Other events were scheduled around the world later, including in Kilkenny in Ireland, in Milan, Italy and in Times Square in New York.

Other cities however held their yoga day earlier than June 21 -- the longest day in the Northern Hemisphere -- including in Paris, Seoul and in Durban, South Africa last weekend.

- 'Not to worry' -

Modi is keen on portraying his physical prowess, last week posting on Twitter his morning yoga routine involving plodding around a tree and flexing over a boulder.

He has also spearheaded an initiative to reclaim the discipline as a historic part of Indian culture since his Hindu nationalist government came to power in 2014.

Yoga has boomed in recent decades, with millions -- perhaps up to 300 million -- practising it regularly, although in the West it is often more of a gymnastic than a spiritual activity.

But this doesn't bother the spiritual head of the biggest ashram or retreat in Rishikesh, the Indian city on the banks of the holy Ganges river considered the world yoga capital.

"At least people are doing it. One day you walk the path, the next day you find the truth also," Swami Chidanand Saraswati told AFP.

"As the Sun is for all, the Moon is for all, rivers are for all, in the same way yoga is for all," he said. "Not to worry!"

burs-stu/jta

THE NEWS: Easy as A, B, Xi: China gives economic lessons to North Korea


Easy as A, B, Xi: China gives economic lessons to North Korea
source: AFP

 KCNA VIA KNS/AFP/File / KCNA VIA KNS Relations between China and North Korea have experienced a renaissance in recent months

Chinese President Xi Jinping has coached his North Korean counterpart Kim Jong Un on high-stakes diplomacy. Now he seems poised to give the young autocrat another lesson: how to reform a state-controlled economy while keeping an iron grip on power.

Beijing has long pushed for Pyongyang to adopt similar measures to those that fuelled China's dizzying ascent from a communist backwater to one of the world's largest trading powers.

But while the highly secretive, nuclear-armed North has been quietly carrying out economic reforms for some time, officially it still promotes the merits of its system and denounces the evils of capitalism.

In recent months, as relations between China and North Korea have experienced a renaissance, Kim has transformed from a recalcitrant and standoffish troublemaker to Xi's eager pupil.

The shift followed a decision by Beijing to back UN sanctions banning imports of coal, iron ore and seafood from its unruly neighbour, after years of hushed diplomacy failed to convince the North to stop its nuclear and missile tests.

It didn't take long for Kim to change his tune: he made his first visit as leader to his country's sole major ally in March, quickly followed by two more trips, during which he toured Chinese tech and science hubs.


AFP/File / FRED DUFOUR China has long pushed for North Korea to adopt similar measures to the ones that have fuelled its dizzying ascent from a communist backwater to one of the world's largest trading powers



Kim, who is in his mid-30s, seemed eager to learn: Chinese state media has been filled with images of the attentive leader taking copious notes during his meetings with Xi.

"We are happy to see that the DPRK (North Korea) made a major decision to shift the focus to economic construction," Xi told Kim in their most recent meeting Tuesday, according to state news agency Xinhua.

"China is ready to share its experience" with Pyongyang, Xi said the next day.

- China as a model -

China's "reform and opening" under Deng Xiaoping in the 1980s started an economic boom that has made it the world's second-largest economy and a crucial driver of global growth.

Despite pressure from Beijing to follow its example, in public Kim had appeared resistant, in 2016 decrying "the filthy wind of bourgeois liberty and 'reform' and 'openness' blowing in our neighbourhood".

But in practice he has brought in limited changes, from allowing private traders to operate in informal markets to giving state-owned enterprises some freedoms to operate, and turning a blind eye to private company operations.


AFP/File / FRED DUFOUR Beijing has also spelled out to North Korea that it believes its economic success was achieved thanks to the help of a stable Communist regime

Having completed the development of his atomic arsenal, Kim announced in April that his priority was now "socialist economic construction".

A delegation from his ruling Workers' Party of Korea visited Beijing in May to learn about economic reforms.

At a historic summit with US President Donald Trump in Singapore last week, Kim expressed his commitment to the denuclearisation of the Korean peninsula -- and Washington is offering him sanctions relief if he gives up his weapons.

The summit also saw Kim take the opportunity to explore the affluent city-state, with images of his visit to an expensive hotel, casino and other tourist sites widely distributed by North Korean media.

The visit bore "a certain historic resemblance" to a 1979 trip by China's then-leader Deng to the United States as the country stood on the verge of economic reform, said Zhao Tong, North Korea specialist at the Carnegie-Tsinghua Center in Beijing.

Deng was able "to see for himself the successful development of western countries", said Zhao, who predicts that North Korea has now reached its own major turning point.

- Afraid of collapse -

Before leaving Beijing on his latest visit this week, Kim toured an agricultural technology park and a rail traffic control centre.

"It looks like this trip is aimed at studying China as a model for economic development post-denuclearisation," said Koh Yu-hwan, professor of North Korean Studies at Dongguk University, pointing to the attendance of Pyongyang's chief economic officer Premier Pak Pong Ju.

The collapse of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s has so far deterred North Korea from opening up its economy as much as China would like.

But Beijing has spelled out to North Korea that it believes its economic success was achieved thanks to the help of a stable Communist regime.


AFP/File / Ed JONES The collapse of the Soviet bloc in the early 1990s has so far deterred Pyongyang from opening up its economy


"China has been saying to North Korea for years that it's possible to maintain a one-party regime while opening up to the outside world," said China expert Jean-Pierre Cabestan of Hong Kong Baptist University.

Xi's tightening grip on power since coming to power in late 2012 -- with a lack of organised opposition and the use of surveillance technology to keep tabs on the population -- will likely help reassure Kim, Cabestan said.

Despite its fear of failure, "at the moment there is no other option" for North Korea other to open up, said Zhu Feng, international relations professor at China's Nanjing University.


AFP/File / Fred DUFOUR Before leaving Beijing, Kim toured an agricultural technology park and a rail traffic control centre

However a prosperous South Korea complicates the situation for the North, which may fear being swallowed up by Seoul economically if they reunify, as happened to the former East Germany, Cabestan said.

For the time being, Pyongyang's official line remains the same.

Capitalism "is a corrupt society rushing headlong into its doom", the state-run Rodong Sinmun newspaper wrote last week.

THE NEWS: Supermarkets must help end 'brutal conditions' for farmers: Oxfam

Supermarkets must help end 'brutal conditions' for farmers: Oxfam
source: AFP

AFP/File / STR Indian tea farmers, many of them women, are scraping a living, Oxfam says

Supermarkets in the West are using their purchasing power to force suppliers to cut their prices, contributing to exploitation and even forced labour of millions of farmers worldwide, a global charity said Thursday.

"Millions of women and men who produce our food are trapped in poverty and face brutal working conditions, despite billion-dollar profits in the food industry," Oxfam International said as it released a report titled "Ripe for Change".

"From forced labour aboard fishing vessels in southeast Asia, to poverty wages on Indian tea plantations and hunger faced by workers on South African grape farms, human and labour rights abuses are all too common in food supply chains," the report said.

In surveys conducted in five countries last year, Oxfam said it documented what it called "unfair trading practices" by supermarket giants such as setting prices below the cost of sustainable production.

They were also unwilling to raise prices in order to take into account increases in the minimum wage, it said.

Such practices left the workers at the bottom of the supply chain to pay the heaviest price.

In Thailand, more than 90 percent of workers at seafood processing plants said they had gone without enough food the previous month, Oxfam said.

Around 80 percent of those workers were women, it added.

In Italy, where many farm workers are migrants, 75 percent of women working on fruit and vegetable farms said they or a family member had to miss meals because they could not afford to buy enough food.

- 'Cruel paradox' -

"It is one of the cruellest paradoxes of our time that the people producing our food and their families are often going without enough to eat themselves," Oxfam said.

The charity criticised major European and US supermarkets for failing to ensure that food producers were treated with dignity.

Part of the reason inequalities were increasing, Oxfam said, was because of supermarket chains' drive to deliver year-round choice at a low cost.

The main beneficiaries from this drive, according to the report, are supermarkets themselves -- with little thought given to the working conditions of people who produce the food.

"The eight largest publicly owned supermarkets in the world generated some $1 trillion from sales in 2016 and nearly $22 billion in profit," Oxfam said.

It plans to launch a campaign to urge supermarkets to "crack down on inhumane working conditions".

"Supermarkets can afford to pay producers a fair price without burdening shoppers," said Winnie Byanyima, Oxfam's executive director.

"In many cases, giving back just one or two percent of the retail price -— a few cents -- would be life-changing for the women and men who produce the food on their shelves," she said.

THE NEWS: New Zealand prime minister gives birth to baby girl

New Zealand prime minister gives birth to baby girl
source: AFP


COURTESY OF JACINDA ARDERN/AFP / Handout Jacinda Ardern said in an Instagram post that the baby was healthy and doing well

New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern gave birth to a baby girl in an Auckland hospital Thursday, becoming only the second world leader to do so while in office.

It was the first child for the 37-year-old and her 40-year-old partner Clarke Gayford, with the new arrival weighing in at 3.3 kilogrammes (7.3 pounds).

"I'm sure we're going through all of the emotions new parents go through, but at the same time feeling so grateful for all the kindness and best wishes from so many people. Thank you," Ardern said.

She added on Instagram that the baby was healthy and doing well.

"We're all doing really well thanks to the wonderful team at Auckland City Hospital."

Ardern and Gayford, who hosts a television fishing show, had known the sex of the baby for several months but decided to keep it secret from the public.

The birth capped an eventful year for Ardern who became prime minister last October, three months after inheriting the leadership of the Labour Party when it was languishing in the polls.

When no party won sufficient support in the election to form a government, she was anointed prime minister by New Zealand First leader Winston Peters, the kingmaker in a three-party coalition also involving the Greens.

Peters, who became Ardern's deputy, is now acting prime minister while she takes six weeks maternity leave, although she will continue to be consulted on significant issues.

"Can I extend very best wishes to all the family at this very happy time," Peters said in a statement.

"Like the rest of the country we welcome the news of the birth of a healthy baby and are naturally delighted for the new parents."

Former prime minister Helen Clark tweeted it was "a proud day for Jacinda & Clarke & for us all. New life, new hope" and described the proud parents as "role models" for gender equality.

Ardern's Australian counterpart Malcolm Turnbull told ABC Radio he was "really thrilled", while New Zealand opposition leader Simon Bridges offered congratulations.

"Being parents is a joy and a privilege and we are sure your new arrival will fill your lives with all the happiness our children have ours," Bridges said.

- Sexism row -

Ardern, who refused to discuss plans for motherhood during the election campaign, waited until January to reveal on Facebook she had conceived and was going to be "prime minister and a mum".

Her plans for a family had sparked a sexism row during the election when a television host quizzed her on the issue, saying voters had a right to know before they cast their ballots.

She rejected the line of questioning as "unacceptable", saying pregnancy and child rearing should not hinder women's opportunities in the workplace.

"It is a woman's decision about when they choose to have children and it should not predetermine whether or not they are given a job or have job opportunities," she said then.

The charismatic Ardern follows Pakistan's prime minister Benazir Bhutto in 1990 as the only women in modern history to give birth while in power, but she downplayed the significance.

"Lots of people juggle a lot of things in their personal and private lives, and I'm not unusual in that. Plenty of women have multitasked before me, and I want to acknowledge that," she said when revealing the pregnancy in January.

Pakistan's Bhutto, who was assassinated in 2007, gave birth in January 1990 to her daughter Bakhtawar Bhutto Zardari, who now describes herself on Twitter as "1st child born to a sitting female Prime Minister".

Bakhtawar tweeted "congratulations" to Ardern after the announcement, and shared a link to a news story on how Bhutto showed it was possible to be a mother and a prime minister.

THE NEWS: Yekaterinburg: World Cup host city where gangs once ruled

Yekaterinburg: World Cup host city where gangs once ruled
source: AFP

 AFP / Jorge GUERRERO The tombstones of leaders of the Uralmash gang in Yekaterinburg

Yekaterinburg has escaped its dark past of contract killings and organised crime to become a World Cup host city with a more hopeful future.

The industrial city of 1.5 million people is the most eastern of all the 11 involved in the tournament, staging four group games including France v Peru on Thursday.

A stroll among the graves of cemeteries reveals how far Yekaterinburg has come in the past 20 years to stage the biggest sports event on the planet.

Prominent among the fading tombstones of Soviet apparatchiks, professors and Red Army heroes is the well-maintained grave of Mikhail Kuchin.

His life-size and intricately engraved tombstone shows him in a suit, the keys for a Mercedes dangling ostentatiously in his left hand.


AFP / Jorge GUERRERO The tombstone of Russian mafia gangster Flarit Valuev in Shirokorechenskoye cemetery in Yekaterinburg


It is a nod to the criminally financed and lavish lifestyle this member of the so-called "Russian mafia" led in the turbulent aftermath of the Soviet Union's collapse in 1991.

He was assassinated in 1994, aged 34.

- Violence erupts -

A few steps farther down in the Shirokorechenskoye cemetery, close to the city centre, are buried other leading members of the Tsentrovye (Centrals) gang.

They were killed in a tit-for-tat street war that erupted in the 1990s between the Tsentrovye and Uralmash gang, named after a huge Soviet-era plant that sustained the city.

With the Russian economy imploding, the gangs battled over everything from casinos and heavy industry to "protection" -- in reality extortion -- of small businesses.


AFP/File / Anne-Christine POUJOULAT Yekaterinburg is the most eastern of all the host cities at the World Cup

It is a dark period in Russia's early post-Soviet history that the people of Yekaterinburg would rather forget -- if only the gravestones would let them.

"It is a notorious part of our history that we couldn't make that transition period (to capitalism) in a peaceful and a beautiful way," said Maria Tretyak, a Yekaterinburg native and expert in the city's history.

"But at that time it seems that there was no other way to make money and so many young people would really want to be members of these gangs."

Organised crime was endemic in Russian cities of all shapes and sizes, with the gangs of Yekaterinburg and surrounding Urals towns based mostly around local manufacturing plants.

- Dying young -

In the northern neighbourhood of Uralmash lies another cemetery where the gang's slain bosses -- the criminal elite -- take pride of place in the best lots and boast the most expensive tombstones, costing upwards of 2.5 million rubles ($40,000).

Like their Central rivals immortalised across town, almost all were killed in the 1990s before reaching middle age.

Freshly laid flowers nestle among the busts and a CCTV camera is trained on some of the tombs to ward off vandals, thieves or gawping tourists.

The two gangs came up with increasingly inventive ways to bump one another off, said Tretyak, a guide with the Yekaterinburg For You tourist agency.

According to one local legend, when one assassination attempt failed, the victim's killers wielded enough influence to turn off electricity in the neighbourhood around the hospital, causing the life-support machine to fail.

- Changing fast -

"You can say that Uralmash eventually took control all over the city and were very influential, very powerful here," said Tretyak, adding that after seeing off their rivals, Uralmash's leaders either died, went into politics or started more legitimate businesses.

The last Uralmash gang boss, Alexander Khabarov, died in prison in 2005 in suspicious circumstances, effectively signalling the end of a violent period in Yekaterinburg's history, said Tretyak.

"Yekaterinburg has changed a lot, it is becoming more and more European and globalised," she said.

"Now it is the city administration that controls the city -- not the gangs."

THE NEWS: World Cup superstitions putting a spell on players

World Cup superstitions putting a spell on players
source: AFP

AFP/File / Oli SCARFF England midfielder Dele Alli wears the same shin pads he has worn since childhood

Some players believe World Cup success is earned through exercise, diet and endless practice drills -- others are convinced it's a matter of wearing lucky underwear.

Players and coaches can be a superstitious bunch and often have a ritual or item of clothing they believe is a charm that has contributed to a winning run.

They range from former Colombian keeper Rene Higuita's insistence on wearing blue underpants to current German striker Mario Gomez's habit of only using the far-left urinal to relieve himself before a match.

Gomez's Germany teammate Julian Draxler gives himself a spritz of scent before a big match.

"Sometimes my teammates ask me if I'm not right in the head," the Paris Saint-Germain midfielder said.

"Every player has a ritual before a match and I usually hold my bag in my locker and I throw on two or three sprays of perfume. It gives me a feeling of happiness."


AFP/File / Yuri CORTEZ Germany's Julian Draxler sprays himself with scent before matches


Sports psychologist Dan Abrahams, author of the book "Soccer Tough", said so many match-day factors are beyond a player's control that adopting a ritual or lucky charm provides something to focus on and take charge of.

"Logically, these kinds of rituals aren't linked to performance," he told AFP.

"However, if a player creates the perception that they are, then the action can become a hinge factor for how a player feels," said the specialist, who works with Premier League club Bournemouth.

- Best foot forward -

England's Dele Alli is using the same shin guards he has worn since childhood when he plays in Russia, hoping they bring the good fortune that has long eluded the Three Lions at international tournaments.

"I've had the same shinpads since I was 11. They are battered (but) I am very superstitious," the Tottenham midfielder told Fifa.com.

Some players such as England's Phil Jones do not like stepping on white lines, while Brazil defender Marcelo always runs onto the pitch right foot first.

The habit is so ingrained that during training in Rostov-on-Don he left the pitch and re-entered after realising he had accidentally led with his left foot.


AFP/File / PHILIPPE HUGUEN French defender Laurent Blanc kisses the head of goalkeeper Fabien Barthez at the 1998 World Cup

"Everybody likes to enter with the right foot, right? I'm no different," he laughed when quizzed by reporters.

Morocco coach Herve Renard has worn a white shirt on the sidelines since he took Zambia to a surprise victory at the Africa Cup of Nations in 2012.

He is doing so again in Russia, although it has not proved so lucky this time as Morocco will be heading home after the group stages.

France are convinced superstition played a part in their 1998 World Cup win, when Fabien Barthez's teammates rubbed the goalkeeper's bald head for good luck.

Defender Laurent Blanc planted a big kiss on Barthez's pool-ball pate before every match, right up to the final against Brazil.

Perhaps the strangest example of the power of suggestion helping a team to World Cup glory is Argentina's triumph in 1978.

- The mo must go -

In an era of short shorts and long hair, Argentina's star striker Mario Kempes was a dedicated follower of fashion, sporting a stylish horseshoe moustache and flowing locks.

But Kempes failed to find the net in the group stages, prompting coach Cesar Luis Menotti to offer a suggestion to the forward nicknamed "El Matador".

Menotti, who had omitted a teenage prodigy named Diego Maradona in favour of Kempes, pointed out that when he visited the striker in Spain before the tournament he was clean-shaven and scoring freely for Valencia.

Why didn't he get rid of the moustache and see if it brought a change of fortune?

The impact was immediate. Kempes scored two goals in his next match against Poland, then two more against Peru to seal a spot in the final.

Another two goals in the decider against the Netherlands saw Kempes claim the Golden Boot and gave Argentina their maiden World Cup title.

"The moustache had to go... that was the start of a new chapter for me," Kempes later said.

"After that, every time (Menotti) saw me he'd say 'You're due a shave today Mario, aren't you?'."

THE NEWS: G7 ambassadors 'deeply concerned' about jailed filmmaker Sentsov


G7 ambassadors 'deeply concerned' about jailed filmmaker Sentsov
source: Afp

AFP/File / Sergei VENYAVSKY Jailed Ukrainian film director Oleg Sentsov has refused food since May 14 as he demands that Moscow release all Ukrainian political prisoners

G7 Ambassadors said Thursday they were deeply concerned about Ukrainian filmmaker Oleg Sentsov, who has been on hunger strike for more than a month as he serves a 20-year term in a Russian prison camp.

"We are deeply concerned about the situation of Oleg Sentsov and other Ukrainian prisoners and detainees in Russia," the countries' ambassadors to Kiev said in a joint statement released via Twitter.

"Their release, as part of a broader bilateral exchange of detainees, would be an important humanitarian step forward," it said.

The US Embassy in Kiev urged Russia to act as the eyes of the international community are on the World Cup host country.

"With the world watching the World Cup, Russia should allow access to all Ukrainian prisoners, including film director Oleg Sentsov, who is in his 2nd month of a hunger strike in a Russian prison," the embassy tweeted.

The 41-year-old director Sentsov has refused food since May 14 as he demands Moscow release all Ukrainian political prisoners.

Major figures from Russia and abroad have called for Sentsov's release, including US author Stephen King and Oscar-nominated director Andrei Zvyagintsev.

Sentsov, a pro-Ukrainian activist and documentary director, was detained in Crimea in 2014 after Russia annexed the peninsula on accusations of masterminding arson attacks.

Sentsov denied the allegations but was found guilty on terrorism charges, and is serving a 20-year sentence in Russia's far north.

Job Vacancy For Data Entry Officer at StreSERT Services Limited

StreSERT is a professional services organisation that offers quality stress-free solutions to corporate organisations. We offer business support and integrated solutions in different areas that ensure business objectives are achieved.
Critically, we evaluate issues as they impact your business, and consequently deploy the appropriate skills and competencies to proffer the needed solutions.

We are recruiting to fill the position below:

Job Position: Data Entry Officer
Job Location:
Lagos

Mission/Core Purpose of the Job
  • To update and maintain accurate, up to date and useable information on StreSERT’S computer database.
Job Responsibilities
  • Verify the accuracy of existing data
  • Key-in existing and new staff data into the system
  • Call over data for error and make necessary corrections where possible
  • Research and obtain further information for incomplete documents
  • Scan necessary documents (photos, signatures) for data key-in
  • Keep information confidential
  • Comply with data integrity and security policies
  • Ensure proper use of office equipment provided for work
  • Carry out other responsibilities as may be assigned from time to time
Key Result Areas: Weight (%) Expected Result
  • Key-in data into Additt within stipulated time 40 Complete 6 files per day
  • Reduce Data Entry Error 30 Reduce data entry errors to 5 per day
  • Give Daily status of work to supervisor 20 Submit end of the day status update
  • Punctuality & Attendance 10 Lateness to work not more than 2 times monthly, Absence not more than 1 (excluding exigencies)
Education & Competences Required
  • OND/equivalents
  • Computer Knowledge
  • Good knowledge of words & spellings
  • Confidentiality
  • Attention to Details
  • Typing Speed & Accuracy
  • Thoroughness
Salary
Proposed monthly salary is Net of N45, 000/m others include HMO, 13th month salary & Pension remittance.

Interested and qualified candidates should send their Applications/CV’s to: outsourcing@stresert.com using 'DA-STR' as subject of mail.

Note: Only applicants with a National Diploma or its equivalents will be invited for interviews.

Job Vacancy For Head, Internal Control Officer


Audacious is Nigeria's fastest growing fashion retail organization. The company retails female apparel (casual, business Casual, business) to the discerning woman.
Audacious currently has Ten outlets in different locations in Nigeria and plans to add more before the end of year 2018. We are very conscious of the importance of a convenient shopping experience for our clientele, this is why all our outlets are in the prime malls in the country.

We require qualified candidates to fill the role below:

Job Position: Head, Internal Control Officer
Job Location:
Lagos

Job Description
  • To Manage the Internal Control function for Audacious Business Concepts Ltd and sister companies.
  • To ensure that the Internal Control function provides an independent assessment of Audacious internal systems and controls, including the systems for appropriate identification and evaluation of risk and for ensuring compliance with all applicable laws and regulations.
  • To draw any weaknesses or shortcomings noted to the attention of management.
Access
  • The internal audit function has unrestricted access to any of Audacious people, systems and records.
Key Job Responsibilities/Accountabilities
  • Overseeing the personnel and daily activities of the internal control department.
  • Ensuring adherence to laid down policies and procedures.
  • Recommending changes to policies and procedures where necessary.
  • Coming up with new policies and procedures where necessary.
  • Apply a risk based approach to the review of the systems and controls of Audacious group through the implementation of an annual programme of audit review work
  • To discuss the findings of audit reviews with management on a constructive basis in order to develop the most appropriate, proportionate solutions to issues arising.
  • To report the results of audit reviews, including management responses and proposed action plans to address issues arising to the Board of Directors
  • To perform ad hoc investigations and reviews at the request of the Board.
  • As a member of any relevant committee to which the post holder may be appointed during the course of the year, to be familiar with the terms of reference and responsibilities, and to participate by attendance, reporting and challenge at meetings and accept collegiate responsibilities for decisions made.
Specific Responsibilities
Inventory:
  • Responsible for coordinating monthly stock take activities in all Audacious locations
  • Responsible for ensuring accuracy of inventory transactions in Audacious HQ (Receiving/Transfers/warehousing)
Accounting:
  • Ensure accuracy of vendor balances
  • Responsible for confirming the accuracy of reports submitted by the accounting/finance function.
  • Responsible for reviewing and calling over transactions posted by the accounting function into the ERP solutions.
  • Responsible for carrying out value for money audits on all expenses/capital expenditure by management through the finance function.
  • Ensuring that Finance/Accounts Department follows due process in carrying out its responsibilities.
  • Review documentation procedure for the unit to ensure that proper documentation is carried out.
  • Review payment procedure to ensure that all regulatory deductions (VAT/WHT etc ) are complied with.
  • Liasing with External Auditors and regulatory authorities.
Human Resource:
  • Review Documentation to ensure that all staff and associated documentation are in place and up to date
  • Ensure compliance with laid down HR policies and procedures
  • Review monthly payroll for completeness and accuracy before payment by finance
Information Technology
  • Review Documentation and password policy to ensure that all associated policies and procedures are complied with.
  • Review user rights on all solutions to ensure compliance with policies and procedures governing access
Sales Floor and Sales Management:
  • Daily review of branch sales records for compliance with policies governing
  • Discounts
  • Loyalties
  • Returns
  • User rights
  • Customer set ups
  • Review of Clock in devices to ensure compliances with shift times
  • Conduct Snap checks on branches to ensure compliance with shop floor rules and regulations.
  • Review Transfer documentation with physical receipts to ensure that all goods transferred to branches are received in total and in good condition.
click here to apply

Job Vacancy For Accountant at Class Hospitality Limited


Class Hospitality Limited was incorporated in 2004, by the corporate affairs commission, of the federal republic of Nigeria to offer first class hotel and hospitality services. Over the years, we have grown to become a household name in the Nigerian hospitality industry. Our portfolio has expanded due to the demands of the business which involves structural development and precision equipment procurement.
We are recruiting to fill the position below:

Job Position: Accountant
Job Location:
Ikeja, Lagos

Requirement
  • Interested candidates should possess relevant qualifications.
Interested and qualified candidates should submit their CV's and written Application Letters in person at:
The Human Resources Officer,
No.3 Anuoluwapo Street,
Awoshika Bus Stop,
Opebi, Ikeja,
Lagos State.



   
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