King of Africa bonus jackpot w/BOTH progressives – Video
King of Africa bonus jackpot w/BOTH progressives
Winstar world casino.
By: Ross Bybee
Original post:
King of Africa bonus jackpot w/BOTH progressives - Video
King of Africa bonus jackpot w/BOTH progressives
Winstar world casino.
By: Ross Bybee
Original post:
King of Africa bonus jackpot w/BOTH progressives - Video
The All Progressives Congress has said the forthcoming general elections may not be peaceful in Okrika and Ogu/Bolo Local Government Areas of Rivers State due to alleged plan by the Peoples Democratic Party to use security agencies to arrest its leaders and sympathisers before the election day.
They also alleged, without accusing anybody or group in particular, that at least 10 of its leaders in the two local government areas might be kidnapped before the election day.
Chairmen of the APC in the two local government areas, Christian Asifamaka (APC Okrika) and Chief Israel Iboms (APC Ogu/Bolo),said this in a petition to the National Human Rights Commission.
The petition, titled, RE: Threat to peaceful elections in Okrika and Ogu/Bolo Local Government Areas of Rivers State, Nigeria read in part, Now the PDP and its Abuja authority have finalised plans to prevent the APC in these LGAs from voting in the forthcoming elections.
This, they intended by using all the security agencies to arrest our leaders, party agents and community leaders who are sympathetic to APC a few days before the elections on false charges.
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APC alleges planed kidnap of leaders in Rivers LG
Alhaji Lai Mohammed
The All Progressives Congress has said the Presidents decision to summon INEC Chairman Attahiru Jega to a meeting that was not attended by other political parties in Abuja on Tuesday is part of ongoing moves to compromise the integrity of the electoral commission, which is expected to be fair and neutral.
In a statement issued in Abuja on Wednesday by its National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, the party said it is wrong for the President, who himself is a candidate in the forthcoming elections, to be summoning the electoral umpire at will, especially when such meetings are populated by his appointees.
Without the representatives of other political parties attending such meetings, irrespective of whether or not it is aimed at briefing security chiefs on the preparations for the polls, the ruling PDP and its presidential candidate are seeking to gain undue advantage over others ahead of the elections.
It is like the referee in a football match meeting with key officials of one of the teams ahead of the match. This is against the spirit of transparency and fairness and must stop forthwith.
Had the representatives of other political parties, apart from the PDP (the President is the leader of the PDP), attended the meeting, the widespread speculations that Jegas life and job were threatened if he fails to drop the use of the card reader, as well as circulating reports that he will be removed before Saturday, would not have happened, it said.
APC said whatever briefings must be given by the INEC chairman on the elections must have in attendance the representatives of all the political parties that will participate in the elections.
It also decried clandestine meetings between some key members of the presidency and INEC officials with a view to rigging the elections, warning the presidency to steer clear of the electoral officials if indeed they are desirous of a free, fair, credible and peaceful elections.
Meanwhile, the party has said the Presidency and the PDP cannot and must not be allowed to profit from their sponsorship of ethnic militias, including MASSOB and OPC, to create chaos and violence before, during and after the elections.
It said the plot by the duo is to make the country so unsafe before the polls that members of the National Youth Service Corps, who are supposed to serve as electoral officials, will simply say they can no longer participate in the elections because they fear for their lives.
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Jegas summons, plot to compromise INEC APC
The issue in the party is the deep divide between the ulama and the progressives.
KUALA LUMPUR: Klang MP Charles Santiago has expressed surprise that the Kelantan Government, under PAS, is at odds with what the majority of the people in the state want viz. better management of the economy in the face of rising prices and the proposed Goods and Services Tax (GST), poor infrastructure and uncertainty following the worst floods in living memory in December.
The people of Kelantan have spoken up loud and clear, attempting to knock some sense into PAS, said Santiago. Yet all PAS can think about is the hudud law.
PAS President Abdul Hadi Awang, he noted, has always been at odds with Pakatan Rakyat (PR) and even foolishly tried to entice Selangor Menteri Besar Azmin Ali into forming a unity government with Umno. If PAS, under Hadi, goes ahead with the hudud law in the Kelantan Assembly and Parliament, PR cannot just keep quiet.
The issue in the party is the deep divide between the ulama and the progressives.
The ulama, he noted, want to form a unity government with Umno despite the latters corrupt and unIslamic image, while the progressives subscribe to Pakatans Common Policy Framework (CPF) which the ulama also accepted in 2008 in the wake of the political tsunami on March 8 that year when the ruling Barisan Nasional (BN) in Putrajaya lost its two-thirds majority in Parliament for the first time since 1969.
He urged Pakatan Rakyat, the opposition alliance, to take a tough stand on PAS on a number of issues including its open defiance of the CPF. Our pledge to the people was the CPF which again brought victory in 2013 when PR won the popular vote with 53 per cent of the votes counted and the BNs share of the seat count in Parliament dived further to 133 seats, said Santiago.
PAS stand, he added, was a betrayal of the people. Umno is the enemy and not to be trusted.
He referred to the 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB) Scandal and other issues of abuse of power, conflict of interest, and criminal breach of trust in Umno and yet the ulama want to team up with such an unIslamic and corrupt party.
The people, he reiterated, want better economic growth than the sluggish 3.6 per cent in 2013, and they need help to get back on their feet after the devastating floods. The Orang Asli in particular have been suffering.
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Pakatan needs to act if PAS harps on hudud
You can hear Phil Matiers comments Monday through Friday at 7:50 a.m. and 5:50 p.m. on KCBS All News 740AM and 106.9FM.
SAN FRANCISCO (KCBS) They can drive, they can work, and now a group of San Francisco city officials, including two supervisors want 16-and 17-year-olds to be eligible to vote.
San Francisco Supervisor John Avalos will introduce a measurethe first of its kind in a major U.S. city on Tuesday to do just that.
Avalos, Supervisor Eric Mar and other supporters say it will encourage civic engagement among youths and instill lifelong voting habits.
While two small cities in Maryland already have such voting laws where the teen turnout is four times of that of adults, the measure here should make interesting fodder for talk shows and web blogs because this is San Francisco after all.
But in order to pass, the Board of Supervisors would have to approve a charter amendment which would then go on the ballot for all currently eligible voters to decide. This November would be the earliest that such vote could be decided on.
This push comes from a combination of some city teens who want to take part in the voting system and the citys progressives.
The San Francisco Youth Commission recently passed a resolution asking for the expansion of voting rights to 16- and 17-year-olds. But there is also the assumption that they will make choices that will lean liberal. Thats why the measure is being pushed by the progressivesincluding Public Defender Jeff Adachiwho have lost ground in recent elections due to the growing moderate movement represented by Mayor Ed Lee.
Having teens vote is not going to move mountains and change presidential elections; however, it may have an effect on smaller local items such as school bonds in which swing votes by one or two percent could make a difference.
So where could this new dynamic lead? Could high school civics teacher become ward bosses who sit down with politicians and promise deliveries of votes?
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San Francisco Progressives Push For Lowering Minimum Voter Age To 16 For Local Elections