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Eliminate Barriers Hindering Women Development - Aisha Buhari

The wife of the President, Mrs Aisha Buhari, has called for the elimination of all barriers limiting the progress of women farmers in the country. .

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We'll Return Bill To Buhari for Assent - Dogara.

The Speaker of the House of Representatives, Rt. Hon. Yakubu Dogara, has disclosed that the fourth constitution amendment bill would be re-transmitted to President Muhammadu Buhari for assent.

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Monday, November 25, 2013

How the Iran deal was done

Months of secret talks led to the historic deal in Geneva.

The deal reached Saturday to slow Iran's nuclear weapons program followed more than four years of diplomacy by the Obama administration that gained momentum with a series of secret meetings in the summer and fall with U.S. officials and advisers to newly elected Iranian President Hassan Rouhani.
At President Obama's behest, two high-ranking administration officials met secretly with Iranian leaders, the first high-level contacts between the rival nations in more than three decades.
William Burns, the deputy secretary of State, and Jake Sullivan, top foreign policy adviser to Vice President Biden, met with officials at least four times since Rouhani's inauguration in August.
U.S. officials began quietly to notify allies of the Iran contacts after Obama and Rouhani spoke by phone on Sept. 27, officials said. Obama himself briefed one prominent Iran critic — Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu — during a White House meeting on Sept. 30.
The Associated Press first published details of the secret contacts with Iranian officials on Sunday. Two administration officials confirmed the details to USA TODAY on the condition they not be named because of the sensitivity of the ongoing negotiations with Iran.
The secrecy of the talks may also explain some of the tensions between the United States and France, which earlier this month balked at a proposed deal, and with Israel, which is furious about the agreement and has angrily denounced the diplomatic outreach to Tehran.
STORY: World powers strike deal with Iran over nuclear program
STORY: Analysts: Israel has means to act against Iran
STORY: Kerry: 'Verification is the key' in Iran nuclear deal
Obama personally authorized the talks as part of his effort — promised in his first inaugural address — to reach out to a country the State Department designates as the world's most active state sponsor of terrorism.
Burns, Sullivan and the Iranian officials met in Oman, a U.S. ally located across the Persian Gulf from Iran. They met at least five times since March, the administration officials said.
Talks gained momentum after Rouhani took office in August, and most of the progress took place in the four meetings since then. Those details were then put in place in Geneva in the larger talks between the United States, Britain, France, Russia, China, Germany and Iran, the officials said.
The AP was tipped to the first U.S.-Iranian meeting in March shortly after it occurred, but the White House and State Department disputed elements of the account and the AP could not confirm the meeting. The AP learned of further indications of secret diplomacy in the fall and pressed the White House and other officials further. As the Geneva talks appeared to be reaching their conclusion, senior administration officials confirmed to the AP the details of the extensive outreach.
The Geneva deal provides Iran with about $7 billion in relief from international sanctions in exchange for Iranian curbs on uranium enrichment and other nuclear activity. All parties pledged to work toward a final accord next year that would remove remaining suspicions in the West that Tehran is trying to assemble an atomic weapons arsenal.
Iran's secret program
Iran insists its nuclear interest is only in peaceful energy production and medical research.
However, the intense secrecy that cloaked Iran's development of its nuclear program, which was long suspected but made public in 2003 by an International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) report that said Iran was hiding the true extent of the program.
If successful, the U.S. diplomacy with Iran could reduce the tensions that have built steadily over the last decade, as both Israeli and U.S. officials have talked openly about military intervention to keep Iran from building nuclear weapons. In 1981, Israeli bombers wiped out a nuclear reactor in Iraq that was believed to be the heart of that nation's nuclear program, and another Israeli raid in 2007 destroyed a nuclear plant in neighboring Syria.
The deal could also reverse more than 30 years of hostility between Washington and Tehran, which became toxic after Iranian students overran the U.S. Embassy there and held diplomats hostage from November 1979 and January 1981. Such a change would become a major diplomatic achievement for Obama.
But if the deal collapses, or if Iran covertly races ahead with development of a nuclear weapon, Obama will face the consequences of failure, both at home and abroad. His gamble opens him to criticism that he has left Israel vulnerable to a country bent on its destruction and that he has made a deal with a state sponsor of terrorism.
Obama first authorized reaching out to Iran shortly after he took office in January 2009. He and Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, exchanged letters, but the initiative fizzled and essentially died after the June 2009 re-election of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, which spurred protests on Iranian streets and a violent crackdown.
MORE: The good, the bad and the ugly
U.N.-CONNECTED AGENCY: At heart of Iranian nuclear deal
The next month, relations seemed at another low when Iran detained three American hikers who had strayed across the Iranian border from Iraq.
Ironically, efforts to win the release of the hikers turned out to be instrumental in making the clandestine diplomacy possible.
Oman's Sultan Qaboos bin Said was a key player, facilitating the eventual release of the hikers — the last two of whom returned to the United States in 2011 — and then offering himself as a mediator for a U.S.-Iran rapprochement. The secret informal discussions between midlevel officials in Washington and Tehran began.
Officials described those early contacts as exploratory discussions focused on the logistics of setting up higher-level talks. The discussions happened through numerous channels, officials said, including face-to-face talks at undisclosed locations. They included exchanges between then U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Susan Rice, now Obama's national security adviser, and Iran's envoy to the world body, the officials said. National Security Council aide Puneet Talwar was also involved, the officials said.
The talks took on added weight eight months ago, when Obama dispatched Burns, Sullivan and five other officials to meet with their Iranian counterparts in the Omani capital of Muscat. Obama dispatched the group shortly after the six powers opened a new round of nuclear talks with Iran in Almaty, Kazakhstan, in late February.
At the time, those main nuclear negotiations were making little progress, and the Iranians had little interest in holding bilateral talks with the United States on the sidelines of the meeting out of fear that the discussions would become public, the U.S. officials said.
So, with the assistance of Sultan Qaboos, officials in both countries began quietly making plans to meet in Oman. Burns, Sullivan and a small team of U.S. technical experts arrived on a military plane in mid-March for the meeting with the Iranians.
Administration officials would not identify the Iranians who met with Burns and Sullivan but called them career diplomats, national security aides and nuclear experts who were likely to remain in the administration of the next president after the June election.
At the time, U.S. officials said, the administration wanted to know if the two nations could simply talk with each other after decades of animosity.
Beyond nuclear issues, the officials said the U.S. team at the March Oman meeting also raised concerns about Iranian involvement in Syria, Tehran's threats to close the strategically important Strait of Hormuz and the status of Robert Levinson, a missing former FBI agent who the U.S. believes was abducted in Iran, as well as two other Americans detained in the country.
Hoping to keep the channel open, Secretary of State John Kerry then visited Oman in May on a trip ostensibly to push a military deal with the sultanate but secretly focused on maintaining that country's key mediation role, particularly after the Iranian election scheduled for the next month, the officials said.
Election a turning point
Rouhani was elected in June after campaigning on a platform of easing Western economic restrictions that have devastated the Iranian economy. His willingness to engage the West gave new life to the diplomacy, the officials said.
Two secret meetings were organized immediately after Rouhani took office in August, with the specific goal of advancing the stalled nuclear talks with world powers. Another pair of meetings took place in October.
Burns and Sullivan led the U.S. delegation at each of those sessions and were joined at the final secret meeting by chief U.S. nuclear negotiator Wendy Sherman.
The Iranian delegation was a mix of officials the Americans had met in March in Oman and others who were new to the talks, administration officials said. All of the Iranians were fluent English speakers.
U.S. officials said the meetings happened in multiple locations but would not confirm the exact spots, saying they did not want to jeopardize their ability to use the same locations in the future. But at least some of the talks are believed to have taken place in Oman.
The private meetings coincided with a public easing of U.S.-Iranian discord. In early August, Obama sent Rouhani a letter congratulating him on his election. The Iranian leader's response was viewed positively by the White House, which quickly laid the groundwork for the additional secret talks. The U.S. officials said they were convinced that the outreach had the blessing of Ayatollah Khameni, but would not elaborate.
As negotiators continued to talk behind the scenes, public speculation swirled over a possible meeting between Obama and Rouhani on the sidelines of the U.N. General Assembly, which both attended in September in New York. Burns and Sullivan sought to arrange face-to-face talks, but the meeting never happened largely due to Iranian concerns, the officials said. Two days later, though, Obama and Rouhani spoke by phone — the first direct contact between a U.S. and Iranian leader in more than 30 years.
It was only after that Obama-Rouhani phone call that the United States began informing allies of the secret talks with Iran, the U.S. officials said.
Israeli concerns
Obama handled the most sensitive conversation himself, briefing Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu during a Sept. 30 meeting at the White House. He informed Netanyahu only about the two summer meetings, not the March talks, in keeping with the White House's promise only to tell allies about any discussions with Iran that were substantive.
The U.S. officials would not describe Netanyahu's reaction. But the next day, he delivered his General Assembly speech, blasting Rouhani as a "wolf in sheep's clothing" and warning the U.S. against mistaking a change in Iran's tone with an actual change in nuclear ambitions. The Israeli leader has subsequently denounced the potential nuclear agreement as the "deal of the century" for Iran.
After telling Netanyahu about the secret talks, the United States then briefed the other members of the six-nation negotiating team, the U.S. officials said. Obama spoke again with Netanyahu Sunday, after the Israeli leader had criticized the deal again.
The last secret gatherings between the U.S. and Iran took place shortly after the General Assembly, according to the officials.
There, the deal finally reached by the parties on Sunday began to take its final shape.
At this month's larger formal nuclear negotiations between world powers and Iran in Geneva, Burns and Sullivan showed up as well, but the State Department went to great lengths to conceal their involvement, leaving their names off of the official delegation list.
They were housed at a different hotel than the rest of the team, used back entrances to come and go from meeting venues and were whisked into negotiating sessions from service elevators or unused corridors only after photographers left.
Contributing: Associated Press

Deadly storm system moves east, threatens holiday travel

A winter storm system already has killed eight, while bringing snow to the southwest. Now, the system is making its way to northeast and could impact holiday travel severely. NBC's Miguel Almaguer reports.
A wintry storm system that has already claimed 13 lives continued to move east on Sunday, making its way through New Mexico and Texas, with the possibility of advancing to the Northeast and hindering holiday travel plans along the way.
There's a chill in the air and snow headed to some parts of the country. What type of weather can you expect this Thanksgiving? Meteorologist Kim Cunningham reports.
The storm, which started in the Southwest on Thursday, could affect a good chunk of the country by the time its westward march comes to an end.
The inconveniently timed storm will especially be a concern for the 43 million people who are expected to travel 50 miles or more for the Thanksgiving holiday, according to AAA. Three million of those are slated to fly to their destinations, AAA predicted.
The "Nordic outbreak" will "produce a mixed bag of wily weather that will end up impacting much of the nation," said National Weather Service meteorologist Joe Harris.
More than a foot of snow was reported on Sunday in many mountain regions of Utah and Colorado, but the greatest accumulation reached almost four feet in Abajo Peak in southeast Utah, according to the Weather Channel. Even Flagstaff, Ariz. has seen 6 inches of snow since the storm started Thursday night, according to AZ Central.
On Sunday, most of New Mexico and Texas and parts of Oklahoma were placed under National Weather Service winter storm warnings until Monday.
A powerful storm system already has caused eight deaths and is headed eastward just in time to cause problems for holiday travelers.
In New Mexico, forecasters predicted 5 inches of snow and temperatures as low as 20. The snow that began late Saturday, paired with the freezing temperatures, created dangerous driving conditions, and many roads were closed.
The icy roads there led to a rollover accident that killed a 4-year-old girl, State Police Sergeant Emmanuel Gutierrez said.
New Mexico NBC affiliate KOB reported strong winds and near white-out conditions late Saturday night along a stretch of I-40, about 80 miles west of Albuquerque.
On Saturday, a storm-related crash involving nearly a dozen vehicles left three dead in the Texas Panhandle. In another ice-related car rollover, a fourth man was killed in the northern part of the state, State Trooper Chris Ray told NBC News.
Four storm-related deaths occurred in Oklahoma, Betsy Randolph, Oklahoma Department of Public Safety spokesperson, told NBC News. Each died in separate vehicle crashes attributed to unsafe speeds on wet, icy or gravel roads, she said.
Three members of Willie Nelson’s band were injured when rain and high winds caused their bus to hit a bridge pillar in northeast Texas on Saturday, according to NBC Dallas Fort Worth. Elaine Schock, a spokeswoman for Nelson, told NBC DFW that no one suffered serious injuries, but the band’s remaining four November tour stops have been postponed.
Jim Thompson / Albuquerque Journal via AP
Cars slide on Paseo del Norte Sunday, on Nov. 24, in Albuquerque, N.M., after a winter storm hit the region over the weekend. The large storm slogged through Oklahoma, Texas, New Mexico and other parts of the southwest Sunday as it slowly churned east ahead of Thanksgiving.
Over 11,000 people were without power on Sunday in the western part Texas, utility suppliers said.
In all, officials blamed 13 deaths on the storm system, including four in Oklahoma, four in Texas, three in California and one each in Arizona and New Mexico.
Three members of Willie Nelson’s band were injured when rain and high winds caused their bus to hit a bridge pillar in northeast Texas on Saturday, according to NBC Dallas Fort Worth. Elaine Schock, a spokeswoman for Nelson, told NBC DFW that no one suffered serious injuries, but the band’s remaining four November tour stops have been postponed.
Three more were killed due to the storm in California, where the storm first hit. A man was killed when he crashed his car into a tree and a woman was killed when a tree collapsed onto her parked car. A third person in California was found dead near power lines that were down due to heavy winds and flooding.
Additional flooding in Arizona swept a man into the Santa Cruz River. Firefighters recovered his body on Friday.
The wild weather system will spread east to Arkansas and northern Louisiana Sunday night into early Monday, according to the Weather Channel.
From there, it will most likely bring heavy rain to the Southeast through Tuesday, according to Weather Channel meteorologist Dr. Tom Niziol.
Heavy snow and high winds in New Mexico and Arizona, ice in Texas and low temperatures in Philadelphia are all part of a storm system moving across the country. The Weather Channel's Janel Klein and TODAY's Dylan Dreyer reports.
The storm is expected to dump rain on areas from Atlanta to the Carolinas on Monday and Tuesday then turn to snowfall over Tennessee through West Virginia as it continues to progress Northeast on Wednesday, Niziol said.
Conditions in the Northeast were largely dry Sunday, but the region experienced a cold blast that bought temperatures down to 10 degrees overnight — conditions “considered cold by January standards,” according to the National Weather Service.
The region might see the second waves of the winter storm system on Wednesday, as many last minute travelers attempt to fly or drive long distances.
"If the storm hugs the coast and develops to its full potential, it could be a flight nightmare, not only for travelers in the East, but also throughout the nation," AccuWeather.com COO Evan Myers said.
A blast of cold air from the north could merge with the storm system from the south and lead to snow accumulation in western and northern New England, Pennsylvania and New York, according to the Weather Channel.
In a second possibility, the two systems would not meet, but low pressure could produce snow in main northeast coastal cities.
Whether the storm will continue to bring snow and ice or just rain to the Atlantic coast is hard to predict since a slight temperature fluctuation could determine the difference, said National Weather Service meteorologist Tom Bradshaw. Regardless, there is “certainly going to be a travel impact as we see the first few people making their way for Thanksgiving," he said.
Already, more than 300 flights were cancelled on Saturday and Sunday at Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport.
Whether or not travelers make it to their destinations, the storm will have moved out to sea by Thanksgiving Day, allowing for dry conditions across most of the country, according to the Weather Channel.
Still, the Weather Channel predicts temperatures in the eastern part of the country will be 10 to 20 degrees below average on the holiday.
But lingering Thursday morning wind gusts between 20 and 30 mph in the Northeast could have the potential to damper the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade in New York City, according to AccuWeather.com.
The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.
San Bernardino County Fire Department via AP
This image provided by the San Bernardino County Fire Department shows a traffic accident on Friday in the San Bernardino Mountains in California.

Israeli PM Netanyahu: Iran nuclear deal 'historic mistake'

Watch this video

Netanyahu: Deal is 'historic mistake'

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • NEW: White House: Israel "has good reason to be skeptical about Iran's intentions"
  • The deal makes the world "a much more dangerous place," Netanyahu says
  • "You are not our enemies," Israel's president tells Iranian people
  • Last week, Iran's supreme leader said Israeli officials "cannot be even called humans"
(CNN) -- While the EU and the United States cheered a deal that world powers reached with Tehran over its nuclear ambitions, Israel was fierce in its criticism Sunday.
"What was concluded in Geneva last night is not a historic agreement, it's a historic mistake," Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told reporters. "It's not made the world a safer place. Like the agreement with North Korea in 2005, this agreement has made the world a much more dangerous place."
"For years the international community has demanded that Iran cease all uranium enrichment. Now, for the first time, the international community has formally consented that Iran continue its enrichment of uranium."
Washington said the changes called for in the agreement will make Iran less of a threat to Israel.
"We believe very strongly that because the Iranian nuclear program is actually set backwards and is actually locked into place in critical places, that that is better for Israel than if you were just continuing to go down the road and they rush towards a nuclear weapon," U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry told CNN's State of the Union.
The deal, Netanyahu argued, leaves Iran "taking only cosmetic steps which it could reverse easily within a few weeks, and in return, sanctions that took years to put in place are going to be eased."
"This first step could very well be the last step," he said.
"Without continued pressure, what incentive does the Iranian regime have to take serious steps that actually dismantle its nuclear weapons capability?"
Mark Regev, a spokesman for Netanyahu, said easing pressure will remove any motivation for Iran's leaders to make difficult decisions.
"It's like having a small hole in your tire, a small hole in the sanctions regime," he said. "In the end, like with your tire, you'll get a flat."
Obama discusses deal with Netanyahu
U.S. President Barack Obama tried to ease the close U.S. ally's concerns on Sunday, calling Netanyahu to discuss the deal.
White House spokesman Josh Earnest said Obama focused on conveying a key point: The United States remains committed to closely consulting with Israel throughout the negotiations with Iran.
The roughly 30-minute conversation between the two leaders was a "useful discussion," Earnest said.
"The President underscored that the United States will remain firm in our commitment to Israel, which has good reason to be skeptical about Iran's intentions," the White House said in a statement describing the phone call.
Obama also stressed that the United States and Israel share a common goal, making sure Iran never obtains a nuclear weapon.
Kerry: 'Very little relief' for Iran
Kerry argued that the deal will make Israel safer by freezing some Iranian nuclear development and removing its stockpile of uranium enriched to 20% purity.
And he said the sanctions part of the agreement is hardly a boost for Iran.
"There is very little relief. We are convinced over the next few months, we will really be able to put to the test what Iran's intentions are," Kerry told CNN chief political correspondent Candy Crowley.
The deal says that the U.S. will provide $6 billion to $7 billion in sanction relief -- just a drop in the bucket compared to the roughly $100 billion in foreign exchange holdings that are inaccessible to Iran because of sanctions, the White House says.
Iran insists its nuclear program is purely for civilian purposes, with no long-term goal of developing a nuclear weapons arsenal.
But such assurances haven't quelled sharp skepticism from Israel.
"If in five years, a nuclear suitcase explodes in New York or Madrid," said Naftali Bennett, the Israeli minister of trade and industry, "it will be because of the agreement that was signed this morning."
Shimon Peres, Israel's president, sounded a different note.
"This is an interim deal. The success or failure of the deal will be judged by results, not by words," Peres said in a statement.
"I would like to say to the Iranian people: You are not our enemies, and we are not yours. There is a possibility to solve this issue diplomatically. It is in your hands. Reject terrorism. Stop the nuclear program. Stop the development of long-range missiles. Israel, like others in the international community, prefers a diplomatic solution.
"But I want to remind everyone of what President Obama said, and what I have personally heard from other leaders. The international community will not tolerate a nuclear Iran. And if the diplomatic path fails, the nuclear option will be prevented by other means. The alternative is far worse."
Spokesman: Israel reserves the right to defend itself
To be sure, there is no love lost between Iran and Israel.
Iran, which in the past has questioned Israel's right to even exist, continues to push Tel Aviv's buttons with incendiary statements.
Israel, which says it has the most to lose if Iran develops a nuclear bomb, has repeatedly warned the West to tread warily when dealing with Tehran.
Iran deal 'important step forward'
Iran nuclear deal reached
Photos: Iran nuclear deal reached Photos: Iran nuclear deal reached
So finding that their greatest ally, the United States, has struck an interim deal with Iran brought condemnation from Israeli lawmakers.
"Israel cannot participate in the international celebration, which is based on Iranian deception and the world self-delusion," said Yuval Steinitz, minister of strategic and intelligence affairs responsible for international relations, and a member of the Knesset.
Lawmakers stopped short of saying whether Israel would go it alone militarily, if the need arose.
But Israeli officials told CNN's Ian Lee they would not rule out a strike against Iran -- and Netanyahu certainly didn't mince words.
In a written statement, he said Israel "is not obliged to the agreement."
"The regime in Iran is dedicated to destroying Israel and Israel has the right and obligation to defend itself with its own forces against every threat," he said. "I want to make clear as the prime minister of Israel, Israel will not let Iran develop a nuclear military capability."
Israel bombed a reactor construction site in Iraq in 1981.
Asked by CNN's Wolf Blitzer about the possibility of an Israeli airstrike on Iran's nuclear facilities in the next six months, Netanyahu's spokesman didn't rule out that option.
"We, of course, would like to see a diplomatic solution. We'd like to see a peaceful dismantling of the Iranian nuclear program. If that can be achieved, that's obviously preferable," Regev said. "But Israel always reserves the right ... to defend ourselves, by ourselves, against possible threats."
Israeli leaders 'sleep with one eye open'
It's hard for most Americans to understand why all Israeli prime ministers are said to sleep with one eye open, said Aaron David Miller of the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars. He was a Middle East negotiator in Democratic and Republican administrations.
America, he says, has "nonpredatory neighbors to its north and south and fish to its east and west."
Israel, on the other hand, is a small Jewish state surrounded by antagonistic Muslim neighbors.
Israel cannot participate in the international celebration, which is based on Iranian deception and the world self-delusion.
Israeli intelligence minister
"I don't think Iran wants nuclear weapons to launch a first strike against Israel. But it's impossible to ignore, let alone trivialize, Israeli security concerns and vulnerabilities in this regard, particularly in the face of Iran's rhetoric, regional ambitions and support for terrorism over the years," he said.
Indeed, the verbal attacks have been relentless.
Even as the P5+1 met in Geneva, Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei unleashed another volley last week in Tehran.
Khamenei said Israeli officials "cannot be even called humans" and referred to Netanyahu as "the rabid dog of the region."
When Iranian President Hassan Rouhani described the deal on Sunday, widows and children of slain Iranian nuclear scientists stood nearby as he addressed them in his speech.
Iranian officials have long accused Israel of planting bombs under the scientists' cars, and analysts have argued that's a likely scenario.
Israel generally refuses to comment on accusations and speculation. After one such attack killed an Iranian scientist last year, Israeli military spokesman Brig. Gen. Yoav Mordechai said in a Facebook post that he didn't know who'd targeted the scientist.
"But I certainly didn't shed a tear," he said.
Once a 'honeymoon'
What is often forgotten in this tense relationship is that it wasn't always this way.
After the birth of the nation of Israel in 1948, it and Iran enjoyed a "honeymoon" that lasted until just before the 1979 Islamic revolution, David Menashri, professor emeritus of Tel Aviv University, told CNN last year.
Israel's ties with Iran were chiefly motivated by "a single word with three letters -- O-I-L," he said.
But the Islamic revolution that overthrew the Shah of Iran marked a turning point.
The Islamic Republic, led by Shiite clerics in the predominantly Shiite nation, saw Israel as an illegitimate state with no right to exist, certainly not amid Muslim nations.
Despite harsh rhetoric, though, then-Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khomeini "didn't want to get into a confrontation with Israel," said Ervand Abrahamian, a professor of Iranian and Middle Eastern history at Baruch College of the City University of New York.
One reason: Israel and Iran had a common enemy in Iraq, a country that fought an eight-year war with Iran. Israel even supplied weapons to Iran to help it fight.
In the years after the Iran-Iraq war, however, Israel began to regard Iran and its support of global terror as a chief threat.
And it watched uneasily as Iran has gained influence in the Middle East since the first Gulf War began eroding Iraq's power.
Those concerns escalated when international inspectors found traces of highly enriched uranium at a power plant in Iran in 2003.
In the escalating conflict, the United States has always said, in the words of Obama last year, that it has "Israel's back."
"The United States has no stake in concluding an agreement with Iran that leaves Israel angry, aggrieved and vulnerable. So, the two sides will find a way to work this through," Miller said. "But for now, buckle your seat belts. We could be in for one bumpy ride."

World powers strike deal with Iran over nuclear program


Six world powers reached an interim agreement with Iran on its disputed nuclear program after four days of talks in Geneva.
In the six-month interim deal, Iran agreed to limit nuclear activities in return for relief of up to $7 billion in sanctions that have hurt its economy.
Late Saturday night, President Obama called the agreement "an important first step" but said sanctions can be reapplied if the Iranians violate it.
The agreement opens "a new path to a world that is more secure," Obama said in a speech at the White House, adding "Iran cannot use negotiations as cover to advance its (nuclear) program."
Israel has been briefed on the interim agreement, according to a senior White House official. Administration officials said the deal addresses several of Israel's most serious concerns about Iran's nuclear program — including Iran growing its supply of 20% uranium and the Arak reactor coming online.
But on Sunday. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu blasted the deal, calling it "a historic mistake" that leaves Iran with its nuclear capabilities mostly intact. He said Israel will not be bound by the deal, and that "Israel has the right and the duty to defend itself by itself."
Obama was expected to speak by phone with Netanyahu.
ANALYSIS: Iran nuclear deal needs hard look
OBAMA: Iran deal 'an important first step'
FIRST TAKE: Obama takes historic shot with Iran nuke deal
STORY: Iran nuclear deal: 5 things to know
ISRAEL: World empowered a nuclear Iran
According to a White House fact sheet, the interim deal "halts the progress of Iran's nuclear program and rolls it back in key respects." In return, world powers will provide "limited, temporary, targeted and reversible relief" on sanctions to Iran.
Under the agreement, Iran has agreed to stop enriching uranium above 5% and dismantle "the technical connections" required to enrich it above 5%. It will also neutralize its stockpiles of 20% enriched uranium, which experts say represents 90% of the effort required to produce weapons-grade uranium.
U.S. negotiators and their counterparts from the United Kingdom, France, Germany, Russia and China had been meeting with the Iranians since Wednesday in an effort to strike the deal.
The interim agreement was applauded as a substantial step by some nuclear and national security analysts.
"This first-phase agreement ensures that we will continue to negotiate a complete end to Iran's nuclear program and should reassure U.S. allies in the region that Iran cannot make a dash for the bomb," said Joe Cirincione, president of the Ploughshares Fund, a group focused on nuclear non-proliferation.
Dave Solimini, a spokesman for Democratic-leaning Truman Project, a Washington-based national security group, said the interim agreement proves that years of sanctions against Iran have worked.
"These are basic requirements after 30 years of distrust, ensuring that negotiations will not be used to buy time to build a nuclear weapon," Solimni said. "Iran's sincerity in these negotiations must always be subject to proof, which is why ongoing inspections and surveillance of their facilities is even more important now. The secondary sanctions which were switched off can just as easily be switched back on if Iran fails to keep their word."
The last round of talks over Iran's nuclear weapons broke down over French concerns about the status of Iran's heavy water power plant under construction in Arak, and over Iran's demand that any agreement recognize the production of nuclear fuel as Iran's sovereign right. The USA does not recognize such a right.
World powers have imposed crippling economic sanctions on Iran to persuade it to suspend production of nuclear fuel in accordance with United Nations Security Council resolutions, and to prove its nuclear program is peaceful in compliance with the Non-Proliferation Treaty, which Iran has signed.
Iran, which seeks to have the sanctions lifted, says its nuclear program has peaceful aims. But the U.N.'s nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency, has reported over the years multiple discoveries of secret Iranian nuclear sites, work on nuclear detonators and implosion devices with assistance from foreign scientists, documents describing safety arrangements for a nuclear test, and plans for a spherical payload for Iranian missile.
The United States, Israel and European countries have said they suspect Iran of developing a nuclear weapons program. President Obama has said the USA will prevent Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon and Israel has threatened to use military force to prevent what it considers an existential threat.
KERRY: 'Verification is the key' in Iran nuclear deal
BACKGROUND: How the Iran deal was done
ANALYSIS: Israel has means to act against Iran
Contributing: The Associated Press

ASUU Gives Three Conditions To End Strike

University teachers have agreed to suspend their five months old strike, reporters learnt  learnt yesterday.
The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) has given three conditions to be tabled before President Goodluck Jonathan today. If the terms are acceptable to the Federal Government, the union will call off the strike.
The ASUU leadership has banned its local chapters and zonal chairmen from talking to the media until after the session with the President.
ASUU President Dr. Nasir Issa Fagge and other leaders of the union were being expected in Abuja last night.
According to a source, who was part of the ASUU session at Mambayya House in Kano, the conditions are:

•commitment from the President that any review or reconsideration or renegotiation of the 2009 Agreement will not substantially affect the pact which is the cause of the ongoing strike;

•immediate payment of all outstanding salary arrears and allowances of varsity teachers without victimization; and

•a written commitment from the President that the Federal Government will commit N225billion annually to the funding of universities for the next four years.

There is a fourth condition, which is said to be “personal” to ASUU, bordering on the need to be wary of gradual loss of public sympathy.

The source said: “Our leaders are meeting with the President on Monday to table these conditions. Once the President accepts these three terms, the strike will be called off.

The Adekunle Ajasin University, Akungba-Akoko (AAUA), Ondo State became at the weekend the third institution to break ranks with the striking union.
It asked its students to return to the campus today. Lecture are to start on December 2, according to the Registrar, Mr. Bamidele Olotu.
Enugu State University of Technology (ESUT), Enugu, and the Ibrahim Badamosi University, Lapai, in Niger State had earlier directed the reopening of the schools.
The registrar directed students to begin their registration on the school portal immediately.
AAUA Student Union President Julius Adeniyi welcomed the resumption plan and assured his fellow students of a hitch-free semester.
He said: “We are dying and wasting away our time at home; and I am backing my Vice Chancellor on the resumption date. We are coming in and nothing will happen.”

How Rep Member Raphael Oloye Nomiye Died, Banker Friend Arrested

It has been a sad time for the family of Rep member, Raphael Oloye Nomiye who just passed on. Raphael, a member of the House of Representatives from Ondo State died on Friday after what security sources said was a sexual affair with a female banker in his private residence located at Gwarinpa Estate in Abuja.
The security men in his house said the female banker who came to visit him rushed down from the main building to inform them that he just fell and was bleeding from his mouth. He was later rushed to a private hospital where they rejected him, that it was a serious matter before rushing him to the National Hospital, where he was confirmed dead. The female banker was arrested and denied ever having sex with the lawmaker. But when doctors carried out series of tests on him, they confirmed he had sex shortly before his death. The banker later changed her statement by confessing to the police that she indeed had sex with him and after cleaning him up, he went to the bathroom where he fell and started bleeding from the mouth.
A search was later conducted in his home and items found where bottled water which the lawmaker drank from, tissue paper and the clothes he wore before his death.

Until his death, the lawmaker was 50, whose wife and children lived abroad.

Sunday, November 24, 2013

Crisis Looms In NIMC Over Fate Of 900 Workers

The National Identity Management Commission (NIMC) and 900 of its workers are on the war path over an alleged plan to sack or “transfer” them to the Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs).They also claimed that the Office of the Head of Service of the Federation (OHoSF) had stopped them from promotion tests because of certain actions of the NIMC. The affected workers are in the pool executive cadre of the commission.
 In 2012, 4,029 workers of the commission were sacked for their alleged inability to meet up with a six-year period of grace given them to acquire university degrees, which led to a series of protests by affected members of staff.
LEADERSHIP Sunday learnt that the commission’s director-general of NIMC Mr. Chris Onyemenam to “sack” the 900 inherited pool workers from the defunct Department of National Civic Registration (DNCR) to pave way for the employment of new staffers in the organisation.
Some of the aggrieved workers claimed that over 2,000 new staff members are being screened and documented by the organization ahead of their resumption of duty. But the protesting employees say that this happening amid their stagnation by the management over the years.
Some of the employees, who pleaded anonymity for fear of being victimised by the management, said their career is being threatened by certain actions of the commission.
They accused the NIMC boss of denying them the opportunity for career progression by his refusal to implement their letters of promotion from the OHoSF.
When contacted, the commission’s deputy director of Corporate Communications, Mr. Abdulhamid Umar, said there were no plans by the commission to retrench any worker. Umar said there was no crisis between the management and the workers.
 ‘‘Please, it’s not true that NIMC is retrenching any staffers. However, the Head of Service of the Federation has requested to audit/verify the staff members in NIMC. I am aware that exercise is ongoing,’’ he stated.
But, the workers said because of the inaction of NIMC on the letters, the HoSF had prevented NIMC pool staffers from participating in subsequent promotion examinations and interviews.
This they said had seriously affected their career progression and appealed to the federal government to save them from the inhuman work situation in the agency.
According to the workers, they were engaged by the defunct Department of National Civic Registration (DNCR) under the former Federal Ministry of Internal Affairs in 2002 and 2003. They said their appointments were transferred to NIMC in November 2009 after which new appointment letters were issued to them by the organization.
The employees who described themselves as concerned staff members in the pool executive cadre, said: “Likely due to the appointment letters issued to us, the NIMC management has arrogantly refused to honour and implement letters of promotion forwarded by the Office of the Head of Service of the Federation for NIMC pool staff. And apparently responding to NIMC action, the OHoSF had prevented NIMC pool staffers from participating in subsequent promotion axms/interviews organised by OHoSF.
 “In the event that OHoSF succumbs to the power politics of NIMC for the transfer of about 900 inherited pool staff to MDAs, we may not recover the series of promotions lost so as to be at the same levels with our colleagues in the various MDAs. Where is it done that a man upon taking over an asset or liability is allowed to flush out all inherited staffers to gratify his political associates and friends whose wards are the beneficiaries in the recruitment to replace same. Is there no voice to speak for the voiceless?
 ‘’Majority of us have additional qualifications as against the management’s claims that we have not improved ourselves. Some of us are also undergoing courses in higher institutions with NIMC’s approval. So, why would the management now plan to transfer us to Head of Service where we will not be accepted in the first place? The belief is that having issued us letters of appointment by NIMC; we are bonafide staff members of the organisation.