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Tag: Officials

  • Federal officials’ authority to track and disable drones set to expire, snared in budget battle

    Federal officials’ authority to track and disable drones set to expire, snared in budget battle

    As suspected drone sightings over the eastern U.S. including New Jersey continue to captivate many, the federal government’s authority to track and disable unmanned aircraft deemed threatening is set to expire after Friday and a temporary spending bill before Congress that would extend that power is now in question.

    Meanwhile, the Federal Aviation Administration on Wednesday temporarily banned drone flights in 22 areas of New Jersey where critical infrastructure is located. FAA officials said the flight restrictions were requested by federal security agencies and are effective through Jan. 17.

    Federal and local authorities have been investigating sightings of suspected drones, but officials say there has been nothing so far to suggest that any drones have posed a national security or public safety threat. In fact, authorities say, many of the drone sightings have actually been legal drones, manned aircraft, helicopters and even stars.

    Tucked into the bipartisan plan to prevent a government shutdown is a provision that would extend the authority of the departments of Homeland Security and Justice to track and disable unmanned aircraft deemed a credible threat from Dec. 20 until March 14.

    That authority is vital, homeland security officials and experts say, to detect and disable any threatening drones flying near military bases, the president’s location, U.S. borders, prisons and mass gatherings such as New Year’s Eve celebrations and the Super Bowl — and they were hopeful a reauthorization of those powers will be approved before Friday’s expiration.

    But the temporary spending bill including the reauthorization fell into question Wednesday when President-elect Donald Trump abruptly rejected it and told Republicans to essentially renegotiate only days before the deadline when federal funding runs out. Congress continued working Thursday to pass a bill to avert a shutdown.

    It wasn’t immediately clear what a lapse in that authority would mean, including to drone detection systems the federal government has deployed to states, including New Jersey where numerous sightings have been reported, at the request of local officials. New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy’s office referred questions about the detection systems to Homeland Security officials.

    The Department of Homeland Security on Thursday declined to comment on the expiration of the drone authorities. Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, along with other Biden administration officials and both Republicans and Democrats in Congress, has repeatedly called for the reauthorization and expansion of the authority for “counter-unmanned aerial systems” operations, or C-UAS.

    “Ensuring that existing authorities do not lapse is vital to our mission, including protecting the president and vice president, patrolling certain designated areas along the Southwest Border, securing certain federal facilities and assets, and safeguarding the public,” Mayorkas told the House Homeland Security Committee in November 2023. “Any lapse in DHS’s current C-UAS authority would entail serious risks for our homeland security, as DHS would have to cease or curtail existing C-UAS operations.”

    Bills in the House and Senate that would extend and expand the federal government’s drone powers remain pending. The bills also would allow state and local officials for the first time to track and disable threatening drones under a pilot program overseen by federal authorities.

    On Wednesday, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, a New York Democrat, was blocked from quickly advancing the Senate bill when Sen. Rand Paul, a Kentucky Republican, objected to its passage. Paul said it wasn’t clear there is a threat from drones that warrants urgent action.

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  • Meghan Markle asks officials for more time to get lifestyle brand up and running

    Meghan Markle asks officials for more time to get lifestyle brand up and running

    If the next deadline is missed, the Duchess will have to start the application process again with the USPTO, which rejected the first try after noting businesses cannot trademark geographical locations.

    Meghan Markle's American Riviera Orchard logo and crest. Photo / Instagram
    Meghan Markle’s American Riviera Orchard logo and crest. Photo / Instagram

    It said American Riviera was a “common nickname” for Santa Barbara, the California city where Prince Harry and Meghan reside, and argued the addition of “Orchard” “does not diminish the primarily geographical descriptiveness of the applied-for mark”.

    The Duchess had already soft-launched her brand with a slick video and a website created on March 14 that remains a holding page inviting supporters to join a waiting list to keep them updated about “products, availability and updates”.

    Since then, Meghan has delivered jars of home-made strawberry jam to a group of high-profile and high-net-worth friends – including Kris Jenner and Chrissy Teigen – who in turn promoted the “delicious” product on their Instagram.

    The initial American Riviera Orchard trademark application, lodged in March, included products such as cookbooks, tableware, jams and table place card holders specified to be “not of precious metal”.

    The USPTO warned at the time that the descriptions of items such as household goods, linen and gardening equipment could fit into multiple trademark categories and needed to be clarified.

    The Duchess was told American Riviera is directly linked to a geographical area and cannot be used directly in her brand name.

    American Riviera Orchard strawberry jam. The Duchess was told American Riviera is directly linked to a geographical area and cannot be used directly in her brand name. Photo / Instagram
    American Riviera Orchard strawberry jam. The Duchess was told American Riviera is directly linked to a geographical area and cannot be used directly in her brand name. Photo / Instagram

    Officials stated “cocktail napkins” could be paper or textiles, while “cooking utensils” could be manual or electric, for example.

    After the application was rejected, the Sussexes’ office confirmed they considered such actions “routine and expected” when filing for trademarks. It said it expects to respond in due course.

    It marks the second time one of the Duchess’s trademark applications has been shot down.

    In 2023, Meghan’s attempt to trademark Archetypes, the name of her podcast, was rejected by the USPTO because of the “likelihood of confusion” with other brands of the same name.

    A spokesperson for Duchess of Sussex declined to comment.

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  • Sri Lanka sports officials too big for their boots

    Sri Lanka sports officials too big for their boots

    Sri Lanka’s so-called National Olympic Committee (NOC) with just one medal in 75 years has been allowed to outgrow nearly everyone in the country and turn into a movement that even the country’s sitting Parliament could do nothing other than debate allegations of corruption, human smuggling and other malpractices.

    It reached a point where the NOC were also wary of arresting the situation that it had to fall on the shoulders of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) to step in and call for the suspension of its secretary Maxwell de Silva after a previous order by the Ethics Committee.

    Last December Parliamentarian Chaminda Mayadunne branded the NOC the most corrupt in the country based on an Audit Report of 2022 and there was complete media silence from its head Suresh Subramanium as the bandwagon kept rolling and De Silva continued amid numerous media reports calling for investigations before the IOC that provides the funding stepped in.

    In his speech in Parliament, Mayadunne accused the NOC of taking custody of international funding meant for former Olympic silver medallist Susanthika Jayasinghe and depriving another Olympian sprinter Yupun Abeykoon of opportunities to move forward.

    For Sri Lankan Olympic officials it was more of a case of serving themselves than serving the needs of the sportsman and women. They perform like total dictators and are excellent at attending ceremonial functions.

    Former Sports Minister Roshan Ranasinghe, the bravest and boldest of them all, could be kicking his heels that he was sacked when he was just one shot away from a clean-up of corruption in sport.

    More than two years after Ranasinghe was sacked by a pompous Head of State in Ranil Wickremasinghe who in turn was shown the door and ousted in a popular people’s vote, sport has ended up in a worse situation with cricket administrators continuing to feather their nests, rugby played in a courthouse and so-called Olympic officials some of whom are not worth a grain of salt continue to hold sway and the country pre-occupied.

    But the biggest fear among sports followers in the country is who will be the new Sports Minister and will he or she be able to rid the country of a rotten sports set up where corrupt and shady administrators cling on to technical clauses in their Constitutions that were created when sport was amateurish and followed by handful of people unlike today when seven out of 10 or more are passionate followers.

    Unlike in other areas, what many don’t see is that some of the biggest rip-offs are taking place behind closed doors by the keepers of sports in the country. Today sport is either a stepping stone to climb the social ladder and get things done that would not be possible in other fields, a goldmine for plundering.

    The so-called National Olympic Committee needs to be completely purged and purified of some of its officials who are allowed to bask in prominence with the country having won just one medal in 75 years.

    While the few independent cricket scribes in the country have nothing more to add to the present scenario other than spare a thought for the passionate lay followers of sports in the country, comes another alarming episode where schoolboy boxers were made to kill sleep, fight in the ring like professionals at the 105-year old Stubbs Shield meet last week and go back with sunrise just a few hours away.

    The Stubbs Shield meet of all was never created to enter into a pickle with other sports in what has now become School Games, Provincial Games, National Games and Sports Festivals that have become platforms catering merely to quantity and not quality

    Why won’t the fabric of sports breakdown when it is left to fester in the hands of custodians who look for escape routes and there are plenty of ways to hoodwink.

    The sport of rugby that was in the hands of gentlemen who had no vested interests when it was played for the enjoyment of both player and spectator has now become a platform for egoistic keepers who have been caught on the blind side while attempting to shift the goal posts for self gain and left behind while the international fraternity has moved forward.

    To cling on to position and defy an order to step down is the biggest conflict at a time a new People’s Government has launched out on a clean-up drive.



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  • Lifestyle audits of ‘critical officials’ should be made public, Hlabisa tells parliament

    Lifestyle audits of ‘critical officials’ should be made public, Hlabisa tells parliament

    Attention turned to lifestyle audits when Cogta Minister Velenkosini Hlabisa was grilled in parliament on corruption and bribery for tenders.

    Minister of Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs (Cogta) Velenkosini Hlabisa told parliament the lifestyle audits of certain people, especially those with the power to give tenders, should be made public.

    The minister was answering questions in the National Assembly on Thursday afternoon.

    There, amid discussions about corruption and fraudulent tenders, Build One South Africa (Bosa) leader Mmusi Maimane turned attention to lifestyle audits.

    These are investigations that compare a person’s income with their standard of living to identify if they are living beyond their means. If so, this can be an indicator of corruption.

    ALSO READ: National Lotteries Commission rolls out lifestyle audits, anti-fraud initiatives ‘to rebuild trust’

    Lifestyle audits: ‘We support that’

    “The ecosystem of corruption is such that you find municipal-owned entities who have acting executives in one instance and in other instances when the decisions are taken and lifestyle audits take place they are not always made public,” Maimane said.

    “Would the minister, in the act of preventing corruption over a long period of time, support the view that for municipal-owned entities, CEOs, and their political principals – those lifestyle audits must be made public so that when decisions are made they can be cross-referenced against that?”

    Hlabisa responded that indeed, the lifestyle audits of “critical officials who have an influence in deciding who at the end of the day gets a tender” should be completed and made public.

    “We support that,” the Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP) leader told members of parliament.

    Watch the National Assembly Plenary below:

    Cogta minister urges tenderpreneurs to report corruption

    Hlabisa said it is a two-way street, however, and the public should report corruption when they see it.

    “We will be able to deal with corruption if we say some of the tenders are engulfed with corruption,” he said in response to a question from Wayne Thring of the African Christian Democratic Party (ACDP).

    “Now, the advice is when a service provider is requested to pay upfront – the service provider as you say honourable member is an ‘ethical man’ – he must report that ‘I was tendering for a particular project and they wanted me to pay money upfront in order to be given this project’.”

    He said citizens had to take responsible action if South Africa was to clamp down on corruption.

    “To complain and not report anywhere will never bring it to an end.”

    ALSO READ: ‘One step forward, one step back’: Corruption and state capture continue to erode SA

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  • FACT FOCUS: Election officials knock down Starlink vote rigging conspiracy theories

    FACT FOCUS: Election officials knock down Starlink vote rigging conspiracy theories

    As President-elect Donald Trump begins filling key posts in his second administration, social media users are pushing false claims that the 2024 election was rigged in his favor.

    One such narrative claims that billionaire Elon Musk facilitated the alleged fraud with his internet service provider Starlink, manipulating the vote count through election equipment such as ballot tabulators. Starlink, a subsidiary of Musk’s SpaceX company, uses satellites to offer high-speed internet, even in remote areas.

    Here’s a closer look at the facts.

    CLAIM: Billionaire entrepreneur Elon Musk used his internet provider Starlink to steal the 2024 election for President-elect Donald Trump.

    THE FACTS: These claims are unfounded. Election officials, including from multiple swing states, told The Associated Press that their voting equipment doesn’t use Starlink and is not even connected to the internet. States have additional security measures to ensure that the count is accurate, according to experts. Election officials and security agencies have reported no significant issues with the 2024 race.

    “It is not possible that Starlink was used to hack or change the outcome of the US presidential election,” David Becker, founder and executive director of The Center for Election Innovation and Research, wrote in an email. “This, quite simply, did not happen, and could not happen, thanks to the security measures we have in place, and these conspiracy theories echo other disinformation we’ve heard over the past several years.”

    Becker further explained that the country’s nearly 10,0000 election jurisdictions use a wide range of voting machines that are not connected to the internet while voting occurs and that nearly all votes are recorded on paper ballots, which are audited by hand to confirm the results of electronic tabulators.

    “If anyone tried to interfere with the machines to rig the election, it would be discovered through multiple means, including reconciling the registered voters who cast ballots with the number of votes, as well as the audits,” he added.

    Certain jurisdictions in a few states allow for ballot scanners in polling locations to transmit unofficial results, using a mobile private network, after voting has ended on Election Day and the memory cards containing the vote tallies have been removed. Election officials who allow this say it provides for faster reporting of unofficial election results on election night. They say the paper records of the ballots cast are used to authenticate the results during postelection reviews, and that those records would be crucial to a recount if one was needed. Computer security experts have said this is an unnecessary risk and should be prohibited.

    Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency Director Jen Easterly said in a statement on Nov. 6 that CISA has “no evidence of any malicious activity that had a material impact on the security or integrity of our election infrastructure.”

    Despite a lack of evidence, many on social media suggested that Starlink could indeed have been used to steal the election.

    “If Trump & Elon’s ‘little secret’ was to use Starlink in swing states to tally the votes & rig the election — an investigation & hand recount is crucial. Now,” reads one X post that had been liked and shared approximately 41,700 times as of Tuesday.

    Another widely shared X post states: “Elon Musk used Starlink to hack our elections so he can have nice things while inflicting pain on Americans. Are we really going to turn a blind eye to what happened and let the worst people among us run the country.”

    Election officials in North Carolina, Georgia and Pennsylvania — three of the seven swing states Trump won — told the AP that their voting equipment is never connected to the internet. In some cases, this is mandated by state law.

    “Satellite-based internet devices were not used to tabulate or upload vote counts in North Carolina,” said Patrick Gannon, a spokesperson for the North Carolina State Board of Elections. “In addition, our tabulated results are encrypted from source to destination preventing results being modified in transit. And no, tabulators and ballot-marking devices are never connected to the internet in North Carolina.”

    The Tar Heel State prohibits its voting systems from being “connected to a network” and requires any feature that allows such a connection to be disabled. This includes the internet, as well as any other wired or wireless connections.

    Gannon added that North Carolina has “no evidence of any alteration of votes by anyone” and requested that people stop spreading misinformation about elections.

    Mike Hassinger, a spokesperson for the Georgia secretary of state’s office, called the claims spreading online “absolutely conspiratorial nonsense.”

    “We don’t use Starlink equipment for any part of our elections, and never have,” he said. “Our election equipment is 100% air-gapped and never connected to the internet.”

    The term “air-gapped” refers to a security measure that isolates a secured computer network from those that are unsecured. This means it is impossible to use the internet to manipulate the software that tallies Georgia’s votes or the memory cards on which they’re recorded, according to Hassinger. He explained that memory cards are transported by hand in secure bags with tamper-evident ties to a central elections office where votes are tabulated. There is also a chain of custody protocol in place so that their movement is well documented.

    Matt Heckel, a spokesperson for the Pennsylvania Department of State, wrote in an email: “Counties do not use Starlink to transmit unofficial or official election results. No voting system in Pennsylvania is ever connected to the internet.”

    A pilot program in Arizona’s Coconino, Apache and Navajo counties intended to “enhance connectivity in underserved areas” uses Starlink systems to for electronic pollbook synchronization, according to JP Martin, a spokesperson for the Arizona secretary of state’s office. The state’s election equipment is air-gapped, one of many security measures.

    Michigan, Nevada and Wisconsin also employ stringent precautions to protect the integrity of their voting equipment.

    Some posts spreading online pointed to a local news segment in which the registrar of voters in Tulare County, California, noted that internet connectivity at the county’s poll sites was improved this year thanks to Starlink. Stephanie Hill, a systems and procedures analyst for the agency, wrote in an email that “this connection is strictly for voter check-in purposes only and in no way a part of our voting system.” California is among the states that prohibit their voting equipment from being connected to the internet.

    Trump is currently beating Vice President Kamala Harris in Tulare County with 60% of the vote.

    Pamela Smith, president and CEO of Verified Voting, agreed that the idea that Starlink was used to rig the election is absurd.

    “While Starlink provided connectivity in a number of jurisdictions for electronic poll books (EPBs) in this election, neither Starlink nor other types of communication networks play any role in counting votes,” she wrote in an email. “Our elections produce huge quantities of physical evidence. A satellite system like Starlink cannot steal that.”

    Find AP Fact Checks here: https://apnews.com/APFactCheck.

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  • Ofili to get $5,500, AFN top officials indicted, other panel recommendations – Blueprint Newspapers Limited

    Ofili to get $5,500, AFN top officials indicted, other panel recommendations – Blueprint Newspapers Limited

    INVESTIGATIVE COMMITTEE ON THE NEGATIVE EXPOSURE TO NIGERIA AT PARIS 2024 OLYMPIC AND PARALYMPIC GAMES INAUGURATED BY THE HONOURABLE MINISTER OF SPORTS DEVELOPMENT, SENATOR JOHN OWAN ENOH, ON SEPTEMBER 25, 2024

    HIGHLIGHTS OF THE COMMITTEE’S RESOLUTIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS

    The Committee submitted a comprehensive 54-page report featuring testimonies of the personalities involved, digital and documentary evidence and annexures.

    Below are the highlights of the committee’s resolutions and recommendations:

    1. Conflicting evidences showed that the Nigerian athlete, Favour Ofili’s omission from the women’s 100 meters event at the Paris 2024 Olympic Games is traceable to any one of the following organizations: The Athletics Federation of Nigeria (AFN), Nigeria Olympic Committee (NOC), World Athletics (WA) and the International Olympic Committee (IOC). The Committee was very mindful not to WRONGLY INDICT anyone on the basis of conflicting, inconclusive evidences.
    2. Conclusive evidence revealed, however, that the Secretary General of the AFN Mrs. Rita Mosindi, was NEGLIGENT in her duty of communicating to the Ministry of Sports Development and the Nigeria Olympic Committee information about Favour Ofili’s event status in a reliable and timely manner. Mrs. Mosindi should be PENALIZED by the appropriate authority.
    3. Conclusive evidence also revealed that the Technical Director of AFN, Mr Samuel Onikeku demonstrated POOR JUDGEMENT by not reporting nor acting on information about the non-registration of his own athlete, Favour Ofili, for the women’s 100 meters event when he first got a “hint” of the “rumour.” Ofili’s situation might have been rescued if the Technical Director had reported or acted immediately on the information that he received. Mr. Onikeku should be SANCTIONED by the Board of AFN of which he is a member.
    4. The Athletics Federation of Nigeria (AF) by vicarious implication should pay the athlete, Favour Ofili, a symbolic compensation of N&million Naira only (about $5,000 US Dollars) for the disappointment and depression that she suffered on account of her omission from the women’s 100 meters event at the Paris 2024 Olympic Games.
    5. Mr. Samuel Fadele and Mr. Emmanuel Nweri of the Nigeria Olympic Committee (NOC) should be WARNED not to rely on social media applications as a means of important official communication in the future. Physical documents and/or Emails remain the acceptable standards for official communication.
    6. The athlete, Favour Ofili, should take an introspective look at her general ATTITUDE to improve her relationships with co-athletes and officials
    7. The Nigeria Olympic Committee (NOC) and the Ministry of Sports Development should jointly develop a written CODE OF GOVERNANCE to improve synergy of operations and close the communication gaps between both organizations.
    8. The Nigeria Olympic Committee (NOC) should be more transparent in its relationship with the Ministry of Sports Development. Had the NOC been more open, its legally-binding kitting contract with an American sportswear manufacturer, Actively Black Company, would not have suffered any risk of breach and caused any controversy or embarrassment to Nigeria at the Paris 2024 Olympics. The Ministry and the NOC should eschew mutual suspicion and promote TRANSPARENCY and MUTUAL TRUST in their interactions for the benefit of Nigerian sports and the athletes.
    9. The cyclist, Ese Ukpeseraye, should write a FORMAL APOLOGY to the Nigeria Cycling Federation (NCF) for the embarrassment that she caused the Federation and the Nigerian contingent to the Paris 2024 Olympic Games on account of the unauthorized post that she made on social media X (Formerly Twitter) about the bicycle that she used for the Cycling track event at the Olympics.

    10.Every Sports Federation should design comprehensive, sport-specific CODES OF CONDUCT for their athletes representing Nigeria at international events. These should be enforced to the letter without fear or favour.

    1. The Minister of Sports Development, even with the best intentions of defending and protecting the image and integrity of the country, should restrain from addressing the media on issues affecting individual athletes and leave that to the Sports Federations. Athletes must be held accountable by Sports Federations while the Federations must be held accountable by the Minister of Sports Development.

    12.Every Sport Federation should aspire to set up an Anti-Doping Commission in order to improve doping control amongst their athletes. They should follow the good example of the Athletics Federation of Nigeria.

    1. The Minister of Sports Development should follow through to ensure Presidential accent to the Nigeria Anti-Doping Organization (NADO) whose enabling Bill has been passed by the two houses of the National Assembly.

    14.Nigerian athletes should take greater responsibility for their own personal welfare by avoiding intake of foods, drinks and drugs that might result in failed tests,

    15.The Nigeria Basketball Federation (NBBF) should review its policy of not having written agreements with the technical officials that it engages for competitions. This is against best global practices as even conditional or temporary employments can be covered by written agreements. The Federation should write Letters of Commendation and present Plaques of Honour to all the coaches and players that made Nigeria proud as the first African women’s basketball team to reach the quarterfinals of the Olympic Games in Paris.

    16.The Ministry of Sports Development should write a Letter of Commendation and present a Plaque of Honour to Engr. Giandiomanico Masari, President of Nigeria Cycling Federation for his immense contributions to Nigeria’s debut appearance in the Olympic Cycling events at Paris 2024 Games

    17.Central to the problems of Nigerian sports is INADEQUATE FUNDING and untimely release of funds by government for preparation and participation at major international sports events. The Ministry of Sports Development should adopt a more PRIVATE-SECTOR-LED CONCEPT proposed by the Investigative Committee to close the huge funding gap in Nigerian sports.

    18.The funds subsequently raised should be channeled toward resuscitating of National Sports Zonal Offices for grassroots sports development; infrastructure development, upgrade and maintenance; training of technical and administrative personnel; early preparation and support for elite athletes; incentives and rewards for outstanding athletes, etcetera.

    1. Full details of Respondents Testimonies, the Committee’s Deductions and how we arrived at our Recommendations are contained in the full report submitted to the Honourable Minister of Sports Development, Senator John Own Enoh.
    2. Thank you






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  • Ofili to get $5,500, AFN top officials indicted, other panel recommendations – Blueprint Newspapers Limited

    Ofili to get $5,500, AFN top officials indicted, other panel recommendations – Blueprint Newspapers Limited

    INVESTIGATIVE COMMITTEE ON THE NEGATIVE EXPOSURE TO NIGERIA AT PARIS 2024 OLYMPIC AND PARALYMPIC GAMES INAUGURATED BY THE HONOURABLE MINISTER OF SPORTS DEVELOPMENT, SENATOR JOHN OWAN ENOH, ON SEPTEMBER 25, 2024

    HIGHLIGHTS OF THE COMMITTEE’S RESOLUTIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS

    The Committee submitted a comprehensive 54-page report featuring testimonies of the personalities involved, digital and documentary evidence and annexures.

    Below are the highlights of the committee’s resolutions and recommendations:

    1. Conflicting evidences showed that the Nigerian athlete, Favour Ofili’s omission from the women’s 100 meters event at the Paris 2024 Olympic Games is traceable to any one of the following organizations: The Athletics Federation of Nigeria (AFN), Nigeria Olympic Committee (NOC), World Athletics (WA) and the International Olympic Committee (IOC). The Committee was very mindful not to WRONGLY INDICT anyone on the basis of conflicting, inconclusive evidences.
    2. Conclusive evidence revealed, however, that the Secretary General of the AFN Mrs. Rita Mosindi, was NEGLIGENT in her duty of communicating to the Ministry of Sports Development and the Nigeria Olympic Committee information about Favour Ofili’s event status in a reliable and timely manner. Mrs. Mosindi should be PENALIZED by the appropriate authority.
    3. Conclusive evidence also revealed that the Technical Director of AFN, Mr Samuel Onikeku demonstrated POOR JUDGEMENT by not reporting nor acting on information about the non-registration of his own athlete, Favour Ofili, for the women’s 100 meters event when he first got a “hint” of the “rumour.” Ofili’s situation might have been rescued if the Technical Director had reported or acted immediately on the information that he received. Mr. Onikeku should be SANCTIONED by the Board of AFN of which he is a member.
    4. The Athletics Federation of Nigeria (AF) by vicarious implication should pay the athlete, Favour Ofili, a symbolic compensation of N&million Naira only (about $5,000 US Dollars) for the disappointment and depression that she suffered on account of her omission from the women’s 100 meters event at the Paris 2024 Olympic Games.
    5. Mr. Samuel Fadele and Mr. Emmanuel Nweri of the Nigeria Olympic Committee (NOC) should be WARNED not to rely on social media applications as a means of important official communication in the future. Physical documents and/or Emails remain the acceptable standards for official communication.
    6. The athlete, Favour Ofili, should take an introspective look at her general ATTITUDE to improve her relationships with co-athletes and officials
    7. The Nigeria Olympic Committee (NOC) and the Ministry of Sports Development should jointly develop a written CODE OF GOVERNANCE to improve synergy of operations and close the communication gaps between both organizations.
    8. The Nigeria Olympic Committee (NOC) should be more transparent in its relationship with the Ministry of Sports Development. Had the NOC been more open, its legally-binding kitting contract with an American sportswear manufacturer, Actively Black Company, would not have suffered any risk of breach and caused any controversy or embarrassment to Nigeria at the Paris 2024 Olympics. The Ministry and the NOC should eschew mutual suspicion and promote TRANSPARENCY and MUTUAL TRUST in their interactions for the benefit of Nigerian sports and the athletes.
    9. The cyclist, Ese Ukpeseraye, should write a FORMAL APOLOGY to the Nigeria Cycling Federation (NCF) for the embarrassment that she caused the Federation and the Nigerian contingent to the Paris 2024 Olympic Games on account of the unauthorized post that she made on social media X (Formerly Twitter) about the bicycle that she used for the Cycling track event at the Olympics.

    10.Every Sports Federation should design comprehensive, sport-specific CODES OF CONDUCT for their athletes representing Nigeria at international events. These should be enforced to the letter without fear or favour.

    1. The Minister of Sports Development, even with the best intentions of defending and protecting the image and integrity of the country, should restrain from addressing the media on issues affecting individual athletes and leave that to the Sports Federations. Athletes must be held accountable by Sports Federations while the Federations must be held accountable by the Minister of Sports Development.

    12.Every Sport Federation should aspire to set up an Anti-Doping Commission in order to improve doping control amongst their athletes. They should follow the good example of the Athletics Federation of Nigeria.

    1. The Minister of Sports Development should follow through to ensure Presidential accent to the Nigeria Anti-Doping Organization (NADO) whose enabling Bill has been passed by the two houses of the National Assembly.

    14.Nigerian athletes should take greater responsibility for their own personal welfare by avoiding intake of foods, drinks and drugs that might result in failed tests,

    15.The Nigeria Basketball Federation (NBBF) should review its policy of not having written agreements with the technical officials that it engages for competitions. This is against best global practices as even conditional or temporary employments can be covered by written agreements. The Federation should write Letters of Commendation and present Plaques of Honour to all the coaches and players that made Nigeria proud as the first African women’s basketball team to reach the quarterfinals of the Olympic Games in Paris.

    16.The Ministry of Sports Development should write a Letter of Commendation and present a Plaque of Honour to Engr. Giandiomanico Masari, President of Nigeria Cycling Federation for his immense contributions to Nigeria’s debut appearance in the Olympic Cycling events at Paris 2024 Games

    17.Central to the problems of Nigerian sports is INADEQUATE FUNDING and untimely release of funds by government for preparation and participation at major international sports events. The Ministry of Sports Development should adopt a more PRIVATE-SECTOR-LED CONCEPT proposed by the Investigative Committee to close the huge funding gap in Nigerian sports.

    18.The funds subsequently raised should be channeled toward resuscitating of National Sports Zonal Offices for grassroots sports development; infrastructure development, upgrade and maintenance; training of technical and administrative personnel; early preparation and support for elite athletes; incentives and rewards for outstanding athletes, etcetera.

    1. Full details of Respondents Testimonies, the Committee’s Deductions and how we arrived at our Recommendations are contained in the full report submitted to the Honourable Minister of Sports Development, Senator John Own Enoh.
    2. Thank you






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  • In Cyprus, officials from Algeria to Iraq train to keep WMD from crossing their borders

    In Cyprus, officials from Algeria to Iraq train to keep WMD from crossing their borders

    LARNACA, Cyprus — From as far as Algeria, Iraq and Georgia, an assortment of senior government officials converge on this small facility for training by top U.S. experts to prevent the kinds of materials used to build weapons of mass destruction from crossing their borders.

    In just its third year of operation, the U.S.-funded Cyprus Centre for Land, Open Seas and Port Security (CYCLOPS) has far exceeded expectations. From the dozen courses that officials were initially hoping to hold annually, demand has skyrocketed, with scheduled training sessions for next year expected to surpass 50, says the center’s director Chrysilios Chrysiliou.

    So far, over 2,000 officials from 20 countries including Yemen, Libya, Armenia and Ukraine, have received training on radiological and nuclear detection for customs officers, methods of smuggling weapons of mass destruction, and chemical terrorism investigations among a host of other topics.

    On Monday, a group of Cypriot and Egyptian officials started a two-day seminar on maritime cybersecurity led by the U.S.-based Sandia National Laboratories.

    “This uniqueness has actually brought … a lot of success which could not had been foreseen when Cyclops was initially being created,” Chrysiliou told the Associated Press.

    According to Chrysiliou, key to the center’s success has been the top-notch level of instruction participants receive from U.S.-based experts, including from the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory and the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, that specialize in counter-proliferation programs.

    The center also boasts an array of the latest in cutting-edge detectors able to sniff out radiological, chemical and biological agents and explosives that countries in the wider region don’t possess or have access to.

    “Here, the participants have the opportunity to see the latest technology in in detecting all of the range of the threats,” said Chrysiliou. “It’s like a showcase of what exists out in the market.”

    For instance, trainees are taught on how to detect and properly dispose of the radiological elements of discarded medical equipment that militants could use to fashion a weapon. Another emerging threat is the possible use of off-the-shelf drones to disperse chemical or biological agents over populated centers.

    CYCLOPS has been the product of ever-closer Cypriot-U.S. defense and security ties, earning plaudits from U.S. officials all the way up to the White House. During Cypriot President Nikos Christodoulides’ meeting with U.S. President Joe Biden last week, the center figured prominently as an example of enhanced bilateral security cooperation.

    The center was built on a $7 million U.S. government grant, $2 million of which was for the purchase of border security equipment. The island nation’s proximity to the Middle East was seen as an asset to helping train officials from the region, whose options for such training would otherwise be very limited. The Cypriot government has secured another $5.6 million in European Union funding to expand the center and purchase additional high-tech equipment.

    “There’s such a huge interest by different agencies of the U.S. and the U.N. too, because they have seen the value of utilizing CYCLOPS because of its proximity to their neighboring countries,” Chrysiliou said.

    Another selling point for the center is that it’s situated a stone’s throw away from Cyprus’ main international airport of Larnaca and is close to top-flight accommodations that this tourism-reliant country is known for.

    The center’s managers want to procure an expansive virtual reality system enabling officials to safely train on biological, chemical and radiological agents. Chrysiliou liaises daily with Kevin Keeler from the U.S. State Department’s Export Control and Related Border Security (EXBS) program, who called the VR system a “game-changer.”

    Although the center does have small quantities of radiological and other dangerous substances for training, a virtual simulator would greatly enhance the center’s training capacity.

    “We’ve already put the word out about this new virtual simulator and we have agencies like, okay, how can we get on the schedule next year when it’s not even been built yet? Yes, because it’s a big factor in today’s world,” said Keeler.

    It’s still early days for the center to count on headline-grabbing cases where WMD materials have been seized at any given border. Chrysiliou said what’s equally important in acting as a potent deterrent is to send out the message that trained professionals “have the means and the ways to check and stop you.”

    “So if we teach Iraqis or Yemenis or Libyans or from other countries to do a better job in controlling their borders, in controlling the dispersion of weapons of mass destruction … it makes their citizens much safer and more secure,” said Chrysiliou.

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  • Sports Registrar accuses FKF officials of lawlessness

    Sports Registrar accuses FKF officials of lawlessness

    Sports Registrar Rose Wasike has accused the current office holders of the Football Kenya Federation (FKF) of acting above the law by openly defying Parliament, the Judiciary, and the Executive.

    In an 18-page letter to the FKF Electoral Board dated October 11, 2024, Wasike criticised the federation officials for failing to align the FKF Constitution and Electoral Code with Kenyan laws and instead “hiding” under FIFA Statutes.

    She expressed disappointment at the insistence of some officials to seek a third term in office, despite having served two four-year terms, calling for investigations and barring these individuals from vying for the same or different positions.

    Candidates seeking the post of president in Football Kenya Federation (FKF) elections, and their running mates will Monday afternoon submit nomination papers to the electoral board at Kandanda House in Nairobi for approval.

    Prior to this, candidates eyeing the National Executive Committee (NEC) positions will also submit their nomination papers for consideration.

    “Continuous resistance to comply and subject FKF to our national laws by the outgoing FKF officials is a slap to the Parliament of Kenya that passed the national laws, His Excellency the President who assented to the laws, plus the entire Government; being the main regulator and implementer of the said relevant laws,” Wasike lamented in the letter, which was copied to Cabinet Secretary for Sports Kipchumba Murkomen, Sports Principal Secretary Peter Tum, and Sports Disputes Tribunal (SDT) chairman John Ohaga.

    She cited a High Court ruling in 2021 that affirmed FKF’s obligation to adhere to the Constitution of Kenya 2010, the Sports Act, and any other national law governing the country.

    Wasike pointed out that it was absurd for FKF to have picked up 47 application forms from her office in 2019 to register the County Football Associations (CFA), but neither distributed them nor submitted them back for action.

    The registration of CFAs is mandated by Section 47 of the Sports Act 2016, which requires all sports federations to register their County Sports Associations.

    “The continuous refusal and failure to return the 47 application forms picked from the Sports Registrar’s Registry in 2019 and to recognise/admit the 44 County Sports Associations that were legally registered under section 47 of the Sports Act as FKF affiliates, while sidelining sports clubs that have registered under the Sports Act, leaves a lot to be desired,” said the Sports Registrar.

    Regarding the amended 2019/20 Electoral Code, Wasike noted that the eligibility criteria are “discriminative,” blocking aspirants from outside and violating section 46 (6) of the Sports Act, which states that “all national sports organizations registered under this Act shall be open to the public in their leadership, activities, and membership.”

    The FKF national elections are scheduled for December 7, following the county-level elections on November 9. According to the Electoral Code, candidates must possess a valid National Identification card or passport, submit a duly filled nomination paper, and have been involved in FKF matters as an NEC member, committee member, referee, coach, administrator, or football player for at least two of the last five years.

    NEC aspirants must also be declared by three officials from three clubs eligible to vote from the county in which they are seeking an elective position, and they must not have endorsed any other candidate for the same position. Wasike argued that these requirements favor the current FKF office holders.

    Without disclosing which positions they will vie for, current FKF president Nick Mwendwa and vice president Doris Petra have both indicated their intentions to seek a third term in office, despite having served two four-year terms since 2016. Immediate FKF Secretary General Barry Otieno has also declared his candidacy for the presidency.

    Wasike criticised the FKF’s non-reference to legally registered counties and clubs, asserting that this implies the clubs mentioned are not those registered under the Sports Act by the Sports Registrar, but rather those chosen at random by FKF as voters.

    This, she said, goes against the government’s advice and the 2021 High Court ruling that requires all sports federations to comply with the Sports Act and relevant national laws.

    She also took issue with FKF’s voting eligibility criteria, stating that FKF insists on using unregistered entities in the form of branches, which were designated as administrative arms of the federation. Wasike urged FKF to utilize legally recognized and registered sports clubs and county associations as voters, as stipulated in the Sports Act.

    She warned that failure to adhere to these requirements and the High Court ruling could lead to numerous court cases, jeopardising Kenya’s chances to host the 2024 African Nations Championship and the 2027 Africa Cup of Nations alongside Uganda and Tanzania.

    “Adherence to the above provisions of the law will go a long way in ensuring peaceful and credible elections, avoiding complaints and court cases from stakeholders, and ultimately leading to the election of the right candidates, which is a sign of good governance in football,” said the Sports Registrar.

    “It is not too late for FKF and the Electoral Panel/Board to save Kenyan football, correct any mischief that might have been caused knowingly or unknowingly, and ensure the outcome reflects good governance of FKF and football in Kenya.”

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  • Ice hockey officials not satisfied with MIAA’s recommended pay raise

    Ice hockey officials not satisfied with MIAA’s recommended pay raise

    On Wednesday, the MIAA finance committee conveyed to the board of directors its decision to institute a 7 percent pay increase for officials and referees of all MIAA sports for the 2026 fiscal year, which begins next September.

    In ice hockey, that would mean an increase of $6.79 a game from the current $97 rate per varsity game.

    That won’t cut it, the Massachusetts chapter of NIHOA said.

    “This change will not move the needle in our recruitment and retention efforts for new officials,” the chapter said in a statement. “With the season just 52 days away, we now look to the leagues to make appropriate adjustments to the MIAA’s recommendations.”

    Ice hockey officials are non-unionized independent contractors, which allows them a choice in which games they work. Currently, an abundant supply of USA Hockey games offer a pay rate of $105 that is a bit above next season’s bump from $97 to $103.79 a game. Officiating club hockey games, however, also usually comes with the bonus of being able to double a paycheck by working back-to-back games.

    NIHOA has no desire to organize its members around a job action, said Mike Ober, a representative for the group.

    Still, opting to work more lucrative non-MIAA games could, in essence, duplicate the impact of a walkout, especially in regions of the state such as the Berkshires and Cape Cod where officials are harder to find.

    “There is extraordinary sensitivity across all of our officials not to impact the student-athlete experience and not cause games not to be played,” said Ober. “I hear that every day from the officials I’m talking everywhere. But officials are choosing to work elsewhere.”

    Tom Arria, chair of the MIAA finance committee, said the decision for the pay bump was based on, “the cost of everything is going up, so it’s only right that we make sure we take care of all of our officials across the board.”

    Arria, director of athletics at Cambridge Rindge & Latin, described the “pretty significant” 7 percent pay raise as “a commitment and good faith to our officials across the board, saying ‘Hey, we value you.’ ”

    Asked about ice hockey officials’ contention they face more costs because of equipment and equipment maintenance — and a job that requires a high caliber of skating skills — Arria said, “I wouldn’t say there’s necessarily a disagreement with anything ice hockey officials have said. But we as the MIAA over the last several years, we have to think about the whole and about the group and about everyone. Every official across every sport works really hard.”

    In response to questions from the Globe, the MIAA first referenced its Sept. 26 statement, which leans on not singling out hockey officials for a special raise, especially in relation to the budgetary cycle, before adding “the position of the MIAA, and its stakeholders in the association has not changed.

    “It is most definitely an ongoing issue and needed to be addressed in a manner consistent with our adherence to school department budget cycles, it is timely to provide schools and districts with recommended rates. We respect and value all of our game officials and the decision made by the finance committee reflects the equitable distribution of rate increases for all officials.”

    Before its membership learned of the pay increase decision this week, Ober said that a September survey of its 512 members showed that more than half “of the officials in the state were going to work elsewhere this winter and they were not going to work for the $97.”

    In its three-year contract proposal to the MIAA, officials had asked for $126 per game (15-minute periods), with $6 increases in 2025-26 and 2026-27.

    Ober said that the generation of ice hockey officials “who, quote, ‘don’t do it for the money,’ they’re aging out, that generation is retiring. We still have a fair amount this season, which is why I think you’ll see a lot of hockey officials that will skate no matter what.”

    To highlight one risk factor, Ober said no other MIAA sport mandates “neck laceration protection” the way ice hockey does. That rule change, mandated by USA Hockey, will be introduced this season.

    “The tipping point is simply that our officials have recognized that there are alternatives that pay materially more and I think there’s also the recognition that our costs have increased dramatically with respect to equipment and skate sharpening that is unique to hockey,” said Ober.

    “Combining all that, we’re simply asking for fair compensation relative to the risk and costs of other sports. And if we can do that, we can course-correct on the recruiting issues.”


    Michael Silverman can be reached at michael.silverman@globe.com.



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