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Netflix cancels African Original series, ‘Queen Sono’

Netflix has reportedly halted plans for a second season of its debut African Original series, ‘Queen Sono’.

According to a statement shared by a Netflix spokesperson, the decision to cancel production of the series’ second season follows difficulties encountered due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

“We’ve made the difficult decision not to move forward with season 2 of ’Queen Sono’. The company thanked the Diprente team for their work on the show and fans of the show.

“We are incredibly proud of the Diprente team for sharing their audacious vision and bringing it to life with Netflix.

“A huge thank you to our fans across the world for the love shared for our first African Original series.

“Netflix is also grateful to the amazing efforts shown by the cast and crew for their stellar efforts in creating this show for our members around the world.”

Reacting to the development, ‘Queen Sono’ director and screen-writer Kagiso Lediga said: “We wrote a beautiful story that spanned the continent but unfortunately could not be executed in these current trying times.”

The six-episode South African crime drama series follows Queen Sono (Pearl Thusi), a field operative for an intelligence agency who sets out to uncover the mystery behind her mother’s death. It premiered on Netflix on February 28, 2020.

Reps call for strengthening of security in North East

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Lawan Hamidu, Abuja

The House of Representatives has urged the Executive Arm of Government to direct the Nigerian Army to strengthen security in Chibok, Gwoza and Demboa areas of Borno State, in the North East.

This followed adoption of a motion under matters of urgent public importance on the recent attacks in those areas that led to the destruction of property and abduction of residents of the area.

Presenting the motion, Ahmed Jaha from Borno State explained that giving the area adequate security for people in the area to harvest their farm produce.

He said “Barely one month my Constituency was attacked more than seven times in seven days and in every attack we recorded loss of lives and property with millions of naira including worship houses and houses of clergymen in that particular environment. We have been witnessing for a reasonable period of time right from the inception of insurgency, it has become part of our lives today since nobody can assist us”.

“As I’m talking to you now, a substantial part of our Constituency is still under the occupancy of Boko Haram and you cannot go to a farm one kilometer away without being in the hand of Boko Haram.”

Mr. Jaha also urged the North East Development Commission, NEDC and the National Emergency Management Agency, NEMA to assist those affected communities as their houses and sources of livelihood were destroyed during the unfortunate incidence

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House demands adequate funding for science and tech sector

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By Lawan Hamidu, Abuja

The Nigerian House of Representatives’ Committee on Science and Technology has reiterated its commitment to ensuring adequate provision of funds for the sector as part of a legislative effort to transform the country.

The Chairman of the committee, Beni Lar from Plateau State made this known when the committee invited the Minister of Finance and the Director-General Budget Office over the low budgetary allocation for the sector.

Mrs. Lar expressed concern over the non-appearance of the Minister, Zainab Ahmad, and DG Budget Office, Ben Akabueze, describing it as unfortunate considering the role of science and technology to National Development.

Speaking after the failure of the Minister and DG to appear before the committee, a member of the committee, Mr. Awaji Abiante from Rivers State called on the House to return the 2021 budget estimates as the present appropriation lacks the capacity to pull the country out of economic challenges.

The lawmakers who frowned at the way releases were being made to government’s Ministries Departments and Agencies said that insufficient budgetary allocation to developmental projects that have the capacity to transform the nation remains Nigeria’s biggest challenge.

Other members of the committee who expressed displeasure at the representation sent in by the Minister and D.G, noted that there are numerous questions needing their personal attention.

The Committee had queried the budget office for approving the sum of twenty million naira as against the one billion naira needed to kick start the laboratory structure. 

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Health Workers Declare Nationwide Strike

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The Joint Health Workers Union (JOHESU) has asked its members to withdraw their services and embark on a nationwide strike starting from midnight on Sunday, September 13, 2020.

This decision was reached after the National Executive Council (NEC) of the union held a meeting on Saturday.

The Union in a statement on Sunday said it gave the Federal Government one week to address all lingering issues and nothing concrete had been achieved.

The health workers are asking the Federal Government to address the failures and decaying infrastructure in the health sector and pay the shortfall in COVID-19 hazard allowances for their members.

The Union is also seeking the adjustment of the Consolidated Health Salary Structure, implementation of the National Industrial Court of Nigeria consent judgment and other court judgments, and pay all outstanding salary arrears.

Ronald Bell Of Kool And The Gang Dies At 68

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Ronald Bell — a co-founder of Kool and the Gang, the heavyweight funk group behind hits like “Celebration,” “Jungle Boogie” and “Ladies’ Night” — died Wednesday. He was 68 years old.

The performer died at his home in the US Virgin Islands, the group’s publicist Angelo Ellerbee told AFP, without specifying a cause of death.

Bell founded Kool and the Gang with his brother Robert and friends Dennis Thomas, Robert Mickens, Charles Smith, George Brown and Ricky West in the early 1960s, fusing a foundation of jazz with smatterings of funk, disco, R&B and pop.

The group became a major smash in the 1970s, its brassy funk putting it in a class with Earth, Wind and Fire, the Isley Brothers and Sly and the Family Stone.

Kool and the Gang scored a Grammy in 1978 for their contributions to the soundtrack for “Saturday Night Fever” starring John Travolta.

The group was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 2018.

Born in Youngstown, Ohio in 1951, Bell also went by his Muslim name Khalis Bayyan.

A self-taught musician, he wrote some of the ensemble’s major hits including “Celebration,” which is still a popular anthem at sporting events.

The group remains a DJ favorite and is heavily sampled especially in the rap world, its tracks appearing in songs by artists including Jay-Z, Nas, NWA, Tupac, The Wu-Tang Clan, Snoop Dogg, A Tribe Called Quest and Busta Rhymes.

Cristiano Ronaldo Scores 100th International Goal For Portugal Vs Sweden In Uefa Nations League

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The 35-year-old is just the second male footballer ever to accomplish the feat after Iran’s Ali Daei

Cristiano Ronaldo has scored his 100th and 101st international goals for Portugal against Sweden. 

Ronaldo is the first ever European male player to bring up a century of goals in the international game.

The European champions took the lead after the Juventus superstar struck on the stroke of half-time in Stockholm.

The 35-year-old produced a spectacular free-kick to give Fernando Santos’ side the lead in his 165th cap for his country.

Ronaldo is just the second male player to achieve the milestone, following Ali Daei of Iran (109).

The five-time Ballon d’Or winner will now hope to surpass Daei and become the leading male scorer in international football history.

The goal against Sweden was his 10th direct free-kick for the Selecao.

Ronaldo sent the free-kick, positioned centrally, high over the wall, dipping viciously into the top left corner. 

His trademark celebration followed as he wheeled away in delight towards the Portugal bench to celebrate with Santos and the substitutes.

A second goal of the night in the 2-0 victory arrived in the second half, talking Ronaldo to 101 and now just eight goals away from the all-time record.

Migrants Allowed Off Maersk Tanker After 40 Days At Sea

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A group of migrants rescued by a Danish tanker in the Mediterranean have been allowed to land in Italy after more than 40 days at sea.

The 27 people – including one pregnant woman – set off from Libya on 2 August.Danish tanker the Maersk Etienne picked them up shortly afterwards when their vessel started to sink.

But the ship was denied permission to dock in any country for more than a month. The migrants finally disembarked in Sicily on Saturday night.

On Friday the group had been transferred to a rescue vessel operated by the NGO Mediterranea Saving Humans.

They were brought to the port of Pozzallo.

“This puts an end to the longest and most shameful stand-off in European maritime history,” Mediterranea wrote on Twitter.

It comes at the same time as Greece is struggling to cope with more than 12,000 migrants on Lesbos after the Moria refugee camp was destroyed in a fire.

Belarus Protests: Opposition Keeps Up Pressure On Lukashenko

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Tens of thousands of people are reportedly marching in the capital Minsk and other cities, in the latest of several weeks of mass protest against President Alexander Lukashenko.

Large numbers of police have been deployed, blocking key areas. Police said they had arrested about 250 people ahead of the demonstration, dubbed the March of Heroes.

The protests have been triggered by a widely disputed election a month ago and subsequent brutal police crackdown.

Demonstrators want Mr Lukashenko to resign after alleging widespread ballot-rigging. But the Belarusian leader – in power for 26 years – has denied the allegations and accuses Western nations of interfering.

The 66-year-old has promised to defend Belarus.

Most opposition leaders are now under arrest or in exile.

It is the fifth successive Sunday of mass protests, with about 100,000 rallyings each week.

Coronavirus: Israeli Minister Resigns Over Plans For Second Lockdown

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An Israeli cabinet minister has resigned in protest against plans to impose a second national lockdown.

Housing Minister Yaakov Litzman said the restrictions would prevent Jewish people from celebrating religious festivals later this month.

The lockdown is due to come into force on Friday, the Jewish new year, and affect Yom Kippur, the holiest day of the Jewish calendar, on 27 September.

Mr Litzman also threatened to pull his party out of the governing coalition.

The measures will be the most extensive imposed in Israel since the country’s first lockdown, which ran from late March until early May.Mr Litzman, who leads an ultra-Orthodox Jewish party, said in his resignation letter:

“This wrongs and scorns hundreds of thousands of citizens.”Where were you until now? Why have Jewish holidays become a convenient address for tackling the coronavirus?” he queried.

Trump Nominee Elected To Head Latin American Development Bank

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U.S. President Donald Trump’s nominee was, on Saturday, elected president of the Inter-American Development Bank, the region’s main economic development lender, making him the first U.S. citizen to lead the institution in its 61-year history.

Mauricio Claver-Carone, Trump’s senior Latin America adviser, told the bank’s governors before voting began that he would be “a passionate advocate” for the bank, its staff and the region.

He will take office on Oct. 1 and has pledged to serve only one five-year term.

Trump’s decision to nominate a U.S. candidate to head the bank broke with a tradition for the president to come from the region and sparked criticism from some Latin American countries, development groups and the European Union.

But Claver-Carone won the backing of a majority of countries in the region.

Thirty of the Bank’s 48 governors voted for Claver-Carone, including 23 from the region, amounting to 66.8 per cent of the vote, a spokesman for the U.S. National Security Council said.

A source familiar with the vote said 16 countries abstained.

Argentina, Mexico, Chile and Costa Rica – concerned about the longer-term precedent of the move – initially sought to delay the vote but failed to win sufficient backing to do so.

The IDB vote turned into a geopolitical battle between the Trump administration, which is keen to gain leverage in resource-rich Latin America and counter the rise of China, and some in the region who wanted to retain control of the top job.

Some countries also were concerned about Claver-Carone, a Trump loyalist, if Trump loses the Nov. 3 presidential election to Democrat Joe Biden, whose campaign also criticised the nomination of the Cuba hawk.

Claver-Carone said he would work with member countries to “strengthen the bank, respond to the needs of the region and create opportunities for shared prosperity and economic growth’’.

The IDB has been led by Latin Americans, with an American in the No. 2 job, since the institution’s inception in 1959.

Critics say electing Claver-Carone to head the bank and his pledge to appoint a Latin American as executive vice president sets a precedent that could harm Washington in the end by loosening its hold on the bank’s No. 2 post.

Senator Patrick Leahy, the top Democrat on the Senate Appropriations Committee, said the vote raised questions about Latin Americans “charting their own future” and signalled it could have consequences for U.S. funding of the institution.

“I have always believed that to be successful, countries need to take responsibility for their own development, and the U.S. should play a supportive role.

“Those roles have now been reversed and we need to review whether this is the best use of resources to assist the people of those countries,’’ Leahy said in a statement to Reuters.