Monday 8 October 2012


Boko Haram: A Growing Islamist Threat
Boko Haram, a shadowy Islamist insurgency, has haunted the predominantly Muslim region of northern Nigeria, surviving repeated, bloody efforts to eliminate it. It appears to be branching out and collaborating with Al Qaeda’s affiliates, alarming Western officials who had previously viewed the militants as a largely isolated, if deadly, menace. The group has called for a strict application of Shariah law and the freeing of imprisoned members in the region, where mass unemployment and poverty have helped fuel social discontent.
In 2009, the group seemed on the verge of extinction. In a heavy-handed assault, Nigerian soldiers shelled its headquarters and killed its leader, leaving a grisly tableau of charred ruins, with hundreds dead.
But by the summer of 2011, the group was striking the nigerian military, the police and opponents of Islamic laws striking the Nigerian military, the police and opponents of Islamic law in near-daily assaults and bombings, using improvised explosive devices improvised explosive devices that can be detonated remotely and bear the hallmarks in the  Islamic maghre. Beyond the immediate devastation, the fear is that extremists bent on jihad are spreading their reach across the continent and planting roots in a major, Western-allied state that had not been seen as a hotbed of global terrorism.
In August 2011, a suicide bomber driving a vehicle packed with explosives rammed the united nations headquarters rammed the United Nations headquarters in the Nigerian capital of Abuja, killing 23 people. Boko Haram took responsibility for the blast. The attack appeared to confirm the worst fears of Western analysts and diplomats — that repression is hastening its transformation into menacing transnational force.  repression is hastening its transformation into a menacing transnational force.
A series of Christmas Day church bombings rocked the country in what appeared to be a coordinated assault by Boko Haram. At least 25 people were killed. Until then, the group had mostly targeted the police, government and military in its insurgency effort, but the church bombings represented a new, religion-tinged front, a tactic that threatened to exploit the already frayed relations between Nigeria’s nearly evenly split populations of Christians and Muslims.
In January 2012, more than 100 people were killed in a series of attacks on Kano, northern Nigeria’s largest city by Boko Haram. The attackers struck eight government security buildings, the national police said, including the regional police headquarters, two local police stations, the local headquarters of the State Security Service, the home of a police official and the state police command headquarters. 
In June 2012, suicide car bombers attacked three churches in northern Nigeria, killing at least 19 people and wounding dozens, and setting off retaliatory attacks by Christian youths who dragged Muslims from cars and killed them, officials and witnesses said. There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the bombings, but Boko Haram has often attacked church services.
A few days earlier, militants attacked two churches in the central Nigerian city of Jos, spraying the congregation of one of them with bullets and killing at least one person, and blowing up a car in a suicide bombing at the other, wounding 41. Boko Haram claimed responsibility.

By the end of March 2012, the insurgent violence stalking northern Nigeria struck a new target: schools. At least eight public and private schools in the city of Maiduguri have been firebombed, apparently the work of Boko Haram. Crude homemade bombs — soda bottles filled with gasoline — have been hurled at the bare-bones concrete classrooms Nigeria offers its children.
The simple yellow facades have been blackened and the plain desks melted to twisted pipes, leaving thousands of children without a place to learn, stranded at home and underfoot, while anxious parents pleaded with Nigerian authorities to come up with a contingency plan for their education.
Boko Haram’s very name is a rallying cry against schools — “Boko” means “book” or “Western learning” in the Hausa language, and “haram” is Arabic for forbidden — but it has never gone after them to this degree before, analysts say.
Maiduguri, the birthplace of the Boko Haram insurgency, has become used to living under siege.  Fear and an army-enforced curfew empty the scruffy low-rise streets well before dark. Nervous public officials — prime assassination targets of the insurgents — avoid speaking the group’s name or blaming it. Army checkpoints are omnipresent. The soldiers, also a favorite target of snipers, are grim-faced and brusque.
Yet the destruction of Maiduguri’s schools has bewildered and demoralized students, parents and teachers in a way that other attacks have not. The targeting of children, even indirectly, is seen as a new and sinister twist



Russia culture and social norm.
Russia is one of the most populated countries in the world and is ranked at 9th but has a low population density.  Russia is the largest country in the world. It has been ranked 154th in the corruption perception index which means Russia is among the world most unethical country. According to CIA (the world factbook) database as of July 2012 Russia has a population of 142,517,670. Russia is rich in mineral resource and energy and is among the largest producer of oil and natural gas in the world. It also among the world’s most industrialized country. Based on the CIA’s factbook   Russia is located in North Asia extending from Europe. (Central Intelligence Agency)
Corruption in Russia is a major issue in the lives of Russia citizens. As of 2005 the corruption in Russia was precarious. The corrupt activities going on in Russia seems to affect every functioning sector of the Russian society, from the hiring of public servants to education to the medical sector. Corruption in Russia is a normal routine for the citizens, it can even be said that it is part of their culture because it was part of their system for a very long time. Civilians were allowed to bribe government official who could help them in one way or another, this was the source of income for the public servants who at that time weren’t receiving fixed salaries. In other words, bribery was legal (FRIEDMAN). Though it was made a criminal offense by different governments and monarchs, the system never lasted because whenever there was a crisis and the salaries of the public workers could not be paid, they riveted back to collecting bribes as a source of income. The corruption in Russia has become a norm; most accept it as normal way the system functions.
In 2010, a law was passed that allowed the public workers to make citizens pay for public services. This was seen as another way to stop corruption but which clearly makes corruption in Russia legal. Though the problem begins with the public officials, the citizens have adapted it as a way of doing things or getting things done. (Bershidsky)
The corruption in Russia is a serious agenda for the current president of Russia and he is doing everything to stop corruption by forming an agency anti- corruption campaign. The campaign is formed to supervise the corruption situation in their country, but the problem is most people believe that under his (President Vladimir V. Putin’s) rule, corruption has gotten much worse (Bershidsky).
Though most people in Russia have accepted corruption a way to survive, few of them are beginning to riot against the corrupt system and asking for the restructuring of the system.
THE TRUE STORY BEHIND THE UNI-PORT STUDENTS BURNT ALIVE.


This was sent to my blackberry as the true story behind d killing of these guys not yet confirmed anyway. This is the real story: Ugonna has been complaining to his father that his house in school was being invaded all the time by robbers so he doesn't sleep there. He had a friend in the community that he spends the night with. Himself and his roommate were coming back from where they went to spend the night when they met their other friends Chiadika and Lloyd so they decided to go together. On their way, Lloyd said that he needed to collect his money from someone who was owing him. In the cause of collecting his money, the whole situation went bizarre and turned into a fight.
The guy who was owing them started screaming and the vigilante group was alerted and they thought they were the criminals disturbing the community since they were more in number than the guy they went to collect their money from. that’s the real story, no laptops or phone or cultism involved. Those guys were homely and they were all christians. Also their parents are very comfortable and provides them with everything they needed. Where are d human right activist of these country, where are student unionist we use to know those days? These innocent students who have a bright future ahead of them, but now they are no more. They government must take law and get the student that lied against them and also vigilante group that was responsible for there killing. I must say that the people that killed them are worst that a devil if the have the heart to burn human beings alive, no matter the crime they have committed then there is nothing they cant do.