FLASHYMAGAZINE
ARIK AIR
ISNO & FEDRICA HOTEL BENIN
REAL ESTATE PROFESSIONAL
HIGH LIFE PLAYLISY -8-. PICK YOUR OWN MUSIC BY CLICKING ON ANY SONG
D.I.D AUTO IMPORTS
VICHI HOTEL BENIN
SHERATON HOTEL ABUJA
PURE WATER HIKE

Ikorodu residents decry hike in ‘pure water’ price

 
The residents are also appealing to the state government to provide potable water

Article |

 

Residents of Ikorodu in Lagos State have urged the state government to provide potable water in the town to ensure a downward review of the recent raise in the price of sachet water there.

Some of the residents condemned the increase by the retailers from N5 to N10, and alleged that sachet water producers and retailers were exploiting the scarcity of potable water in the town.

Bukola Lawal, a teacher, said that water remained a basic necessity of life and should be affordable to the masses.

“I strongly disapprove of the increase in the price of pure water (sachet water) because it is not everyone who can afford to pay N10 for it,” she said. “Pure water is the closest hygienic water for most families here, thus, it should be affordable.”

Bisi Olatoye, a sachet water seller, said that the increase in the cost of a sachet of water resulted from an increase in the price of a bag of the product from N50 to N70. “We have no option because the cost price will determine the selling price,” she said.

Idowu Jakande, a civil servant, urged the state government to provide water in most parts of Ikorodu to alleviate the suffering of the residents. “If there is water in most parts, it will curtail the excesses of the producers of pure water,” he said.

A sachet of pure water still sells for N5 in many other parts of the state.  

SOURCE: Daily Times Nigeria 

 
AFRICAN STUPID BOY

Feds pressure African dictator's son to surrender Ferrari, Michael Jackson's glove

 

2011 Ferrari 599 GTO

The U.S. government may soon own one of Michael Jackson's white gloves, a $530,000 Ferrari and a $30 million Malibu estate if it succeeds in seizing them from the son of a corrupt African dictator.

In a case kept hidden from public view until last week, the U.S. Department of Justice says it's pursuing more than $32 million in assets from Teodoro Nguema Obiang Mangue, whose father Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo has ruled over oil-rich Equatorial Guinea for 32 years -- and has been accused by authorities around the world of illicitly siphoning hundreds of millions of dollars for himself and his family.

A 2010 U.S. Senate report detailed how Obiang the younger, known as Teodorin, had moved $110 million into the United States through shell companies and anonymous transactions, propping up a hard-partying lifestyle that included spending $30 million on one of Malibu's largest mansions and a $38.5 million Gulfstream V jet. Obiang was also known to collect supercars like they were Hot Wheels, with at least 32 cars and motorcycles at one point, including eight Ferraris, two Bugatti Veyrons and a $2 million Maserati.

 

 

While the U.S. Department of Justice has said a probe into Obiang had been ongoing since 2004, the first signs of legal trouble for Obiang came from France, where authorities seized 11 of his cars last month, including the $2 million Maserati MC-12. While the Justice Department had sought seven cars from Obiang in California, its latest request mentions only one -- a 2011 Ferrari 599 GTO.

The documents unsealed last week in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles offer the first glimpse of the case built by the Justice against Obiang, accusing him of spending more than $100 million garnered from extortion and embezzlement in Equatorial Guinea. The feds also revealed how Obiang bought $3.2 million worth of memorabilia from Michael Jackson's estate earlier this year, including the white crystal-studded glove Jackson wore on the "Bad" tour, the MTV Music Video Award for "We Are The World" and several of the life-size figurines Jackson used to keep at his Neverland Ranch.

So far, no representatives of Obiang's has officially responded to the government's bid, and the Justice Department has not yet responded to a request for comment from Yahoo! Autos. Human Rights Watch, an advocacy group long critical of inaction against the Obiang family, has called on the United States and other countries to move against the clan despite their control over a key oil supply.

“The move to freeze Teodorín’s assets in the U.S. is overdue,” said Arvind Ganesan, business and human rights director at Human Rights Watch, in a statement. “But the real test will be if the U.S. government vigorously pursues the inquiry to its conclusion without letting diplomatic or business ties stand in the way.”

Note: Comments have been disabled for this article. If you would like to comment, please follow Yahoo! Autos on Twitter and tweet about it.

This website is powered by the Spruz