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News_Naija

Rice Most Seized Commodity In Q1 Customs
~2.0 mins read
The Nigeria Customs Service has said that with 159 cases involving 135,474 bags valued at N939m, rice remained the most prevalent commodity seized by the service in the first quarter of 2025. The Comptroller-General of Customs, Adewale Adeniyi, stated this in Abuja while briefing journalists on the service’s activities in the first quarter of the year, according to his speech made available to our correspondent. Adeniyi said aside from rice, petroleum products followed with 61 seizures, totaling 65,819 litres with a duty-paid value of N43m. “Rice remained the most prevalent seized commodity, with 159 cases involving 135,474 bags valued at N939m. Petroleum products followed with 61 seizures totaling 65,819 liters valued at N43m,” Adeniyi said. According to him, of particular note were 22 narcotics interceptions valued at N730m, which reflects the service’s intensified focus on combating drug trafficking. “The service also recorded three high-value wildlife product seizures with a remarkable N5.6bn value, underscoring both the lucrative nature of this illegal trade and our commitment to environmental protection under international conventions,” he said. The CGC added that other notable seizures included 13 cases of textile fabrics valued at N134m, “five cases of retreaded tires valued at N104m, and pharmaceuticals, one case valued at N17.1m. These comprehensive results demonstrate the service’s vigilance across all categories of prohibited and restricted goods.” He maintained that the trend of seizures highlights several strategic priorities, stressing that the service pays more attention to intercepting high-volume items like rice and petroleum products through enhanced border surveillance. “Specialized operations targeting high-value wildlife trafficking, building on existing collaborations with UNODC and other international partners, sustained focus on dangerous narcotics and pharmaceutical smuggling, implementation of advanced non-intrusive inspection technology to improve detection rates,” he said. According to him, from rice to wildlife, these seizures show the service’s targeted approach, stressing that while the results indicate progress in curbing smuggling activities, the service recognizes the evolving nature of illicit trade. The CGC vowed that the NCS remains committed to refining its enforcement strategies through intelligence-led operations, technological advancement, and strengthened interagency cooperation to protect national revenue and security. He stated that within the period under review, the service achieved several significant milestones in its modernization and institutional development agenda. Adeniyi maintained that the achievements align with the service’s strategic objectives and contribute to its overall mandate. He said that within the period under review, the service continued to roll out its indigenously developed customs clearance platform, B’Odogwu, expanding its operations to additional customs formations across the country, adding that the expansion has enhanced operational efficiency and improved service delivery to our stakeholders. The CGC explained that in February, the service officially launched the Authorized Economic Operators Programme, “a World Customs Organization-endorsed initiative that recognises businesses with strong compliance records and security standards. This program provides benefits such as expedited clearance, reduced inspections, and enhanced predictability in customs procedures for qualifying operators.”
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Futbol

~6.0 mins read
If the past decade of English football has one unifying theme it is tactical renewal. Since the mid-2010s - and since Antonio Conte, Pep Guardiola and Jurgen Klopp - the Premier League has attracted Europe's best coaches, putting a once sleepy and unsophisticated division at the vanguard of tactical innovation. But we are in a moment of flux. New ideas still flood into the league but nothing, yet, has emerged as the next great theory. As Guardiola treads water at Manchester City we are waiting to find out where the sport goes next. Here are some ideas - some quirkier than others - for the future of football. Let's start with one of the weirder ones… but also one that feeds most directly into where the game seems to be heading. A couple of years ago the way Roberto de Zerbi stretched the pitch from goal-kicks was all the rage. He kept five players next to his goalkeeper and stuck five players on the halfway line, emptying central midfield and splitting a confused opposition in two. Brighton would then kick it long, bypassing half the team. This kind of thing might come back again, and certainly long balls are boomeranging back into fashion as the natural antidote to high pressing, short goal-kicks and high defensive lines. A decade of sucking everyone into tight spaces was bound to trigger a counter-reaction of stretching things back out. So, here's a thought for all those high-risk De Zerbi types. When defending a corner, instead of packing the box with bodies, why not begin a game of chicken and leave four or five on the halfway line? This would create exciting five-on-two long-ball counter-attacking scenarios, or, more likely, force the attacking team to leave five or six players back. Just like that you've decluttered the penalty area and, at the elite level, clearing a path for the goalkeeper and creating simpler one-on-one marking could reduce the chances of conceding. Corners are in vogue at the moment and the set-piece coach is the new must-have accessory. But maybe we're looking too closely at 'love trains' and marking systems in a messy penalty box. It's within a team's power to free up space and lean into ultra-stretched football. Just don't be chicken. There isn't enough deception in football tactics. There are the 'dark arts' of defending, the dummy and the no-look pass. But where are the Trojan horses, the tactical decoys? Players are getting more versatile all the time and (most) managers are too, regularly changing formation between matches and within them. In fact, a lot of managers these days would reject the idea of the formation. But there are still basic differences between, say, the 4-3-3 and the 3-4-2-1, and although a lot of coaches are comfortable switching it up based on the game state - moving to a back three to see out the final few minutes of a 1-0 lead, for example - nobody changes formation early in a game. And nobody is doing it to fool the other manager. Imagine two teams lining up in similar 4-3-3s, with touchline-hugging wingers and two number eights in front of a defensive midfielder. For the first 10 minutes they feel each other out, getting used to their opponents' patterns. Then all of a sudden one team swaps to a 3-4-2-1. The wingers disappear, the three-player triangle in midfield becomes a box-shape four, and the other side has to scramble to keep up. Five minutes later, they change back again. Or switch to a third system entirely. It would be chaotic, but the team who planned the switches in training would have a huge advantage in those frantic few minutes of adaptation. And it could have a huge impact on the game because, at the risk of getting highfalutin, it would require a new way of thinking about time. Currently football people only think about time in quite a limited way: how long we have to hold on to the lead, when the first substitution should be made, when to throw the kitchen sink. Time is an attritional dance with the other team, something we react to, the variable that slips through our fingers. Decoy formations would require breaking up the game into chunks of time and planning each segment. Once we start thinking this way, the 90 minutes could feel longer and richer - something to seize and control. There are about 30 throw-ins per match yet nobody has thought to seek innovation around the most common set-piece in the game - and one with an (inexplicable) detail ready to exploit: no offsides. Except, of course, one man did innovate some 17 years ago. It's just that nobody has thought to copy him. A Rory Delap throw arrowing through the sky is one of the Premier League's most iconic images. His throw-ins led to 25 Stoke City goals in his first four seasons at the club, terrifying defences to the extent that on one infamous occasion Hull City goalkeeper Boaz Myhill chose not to clear for touch but boot the ball straight out for a corner. And yet the technique of Delap's throw-in retired with him. Presumably there is nothing unique about Delap's musculature that prevents it from being taught to others, so why has it never been repeated? Why hasn't Mikel Arteta - who says he takes comparisons with Tony Pulis' Stoke as "a compliment" - brought Delap on to his coaching staff? The most likely explanation is the "Rick Barry" phenomenon. Barry retired from the NBA in 1980 as the all-time leader in free-throw shooting percentage, having exclusively used under-arm "granny throws", yet nobody has copied his technique. It is seen as childish, uncool, un... basketball. Shaquille O'Neal, when advised by Barry to "granny throw" in response to his poor 52% record, summed up the problem: "I'd shoot 0% before I'd shoot underhanded." Maybe a similar phenomenon means Delap's throws are seen as too ugly and too direct - too far outside the elegant philosophies of the elite managers - to be repeated. If so, they ought to loosen up. If someone breaks down that barrier it could lead to a flurry of copycats, permanently turning the throw-in into a corner-like chance and permanently changing how football is played. It would be an exaggeration to say centre-backs have gone unchanged over the past couple of decades. Chris Wilder's overlapping centre-backs at Sheffield United have led to a pared-back version become commonplace for managers who deploy a back three. England manager Thomas Tuchel, for example, may instruct his outside centre-backs to linger towards the corner of the penalty box. But by and large the position is untouched. And after years of full-backs being redeployed, culminating in Ange Postecoglou using his full-backs as number eights, maybe it's time we give the centre-back new responsibilities. There's nothing new about the marauding centre-back, you might say. Franco Baresi used to break lines some 40 years ago, while in England Rio Ferdinand became renowned for this feature of his game in the 2000s. But we could take this one further. Centre-backs, unmarked and untracked, could start to make off-the-ball runs through the lines, slipping unnoticed right up into the forward line and beyond like Destiny Udogie at Tottenham Hotspur. If a full-back shuttled across to cover then there's no reason why powerful centre-backs - better on the ball than ever - can't be freed to become the spare player; the disruptive force that sneaks through the system. OK, wait. Hear us out. Liverpool are 1-0 down against League One opposition in the EFL Cup. There are five minutes left on the clock and all 11 opponents are camped in their third. Goalkeeper Alisson is now in a quarterback role, sat on the halfway line spraying passes left and right. So, Arne Slot withdraws Alisson to bring on an extra forward and, with an ironic flourish, gives he-needs-to-get-serious-about-his-defending's Trent Alexander-Arnold the goalie gloves. Trent stayed behind in training the previous week for a few extra sessions to learn the basics of goalkeeping, even though he's unlikely to do any during his five minutes on the pitch. And if he is called upon then a) Alexander-Arnold in goal might encourage a wild shot from distance that's easier to gather, or b) would face a four-on-two break that goalkeepers rarely keep out anyway. It sounds mad at first, but the more you think about it... why not? Liverpool lose little while gaining a better quarterback distributor and an extra forward. Real tactical innovation requires maverick thinking. Yes, the role of a keeper has already evolved over the past decade, but let's see what Alexander-Arnold can do in goal.
All thanks to BBC Sport
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Futbol

~0.7 mins read
Latest from Aston Villa's pre-match news conference before their Champions League quarter-final second-leg against PSG Manager Unai Emery is speaking to the media Emery - 'Watkins showed he is feeling fantastic' with goal against Southampton on Saturday Villa lost the first leg 3-1 in Paris and will face Arsenal or Real Madrid if they progress on Tuesday (20:00 BST) Get Involved: #bbcfootball, via WhatsApp on 03301231826 or text 81111 (UK only, standard message rates apply)
All thanks to BBC Sport
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News_Naija

NiMet Workers Strike Disrupts Flights, FG Meets Unions Today
~3.0 mins read
Flight activities were disrupted at the Lagos, Abuja, and Kano airports on Wednesday as workers of the Nigerian Meteorological Agency staged protests at the facilities. At the Lagos airport, XEJET, Aero Contractors, and Ibom Air operated as scheduled, while Air Peace did not. In a statement posted on its X handle, Air Peace stated that following the strike by NiMet staff, it had to suspend its operations. The statement, which was signed by the airline’s Head of Corporate Communications, Ejike Ndiulo, stated, “Due to the ongoing NiMet strike and the unavailability of CNH (hazardous weather) reports required for safe landings, Air Peace has suspended all flight operations nationwide until the strike is over. “Your safety is our top priority. We appreciate your understanding and will share updates as the situation unfolds.” To tackle the situation, the Minister of Aviation and Aerospace Development, Festus Keyamo, called for a meeting with members of the protesting NiMet unions. The meeting is scheduled to be held today (Thursday). At the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja, the strike officially commenced at 7:00 am on Wednesday, with NiMet staff and union members seen walking around the premises It was also gathered that some employees spent the night at the agency’s premises to enforce a complete halt to operations. At the Mallam Aminu Kano International Airport, Kano State, many passengers were stranded on Wednesday following the protest by NiMet workers over the non-implementation of the new national minimum wage. The protest caused delays in several scheduled flights at the airport. An airport staff member, who spoke to The PUNCH on the condition of anonymity due to lack of authorisation to speak on the matter, said the protest disrupted many flights, forcing the airport authority to cancel or delay them. “As you know, flights are determined by weather, and NiMet is the agency providing weather information to pilots. So, though some flight operations are still ongoing, the protest has affected many flights,” he said. It was gathered that many air travellers were left stranded as numerous flights experienced delays due to the protest. The Northwest Zonal Chairman of the Amalgamated Union of Public Corporations, Civil Service Technical and Recreational Employees, Timothy Meshelia, also confirmed that the protest disrupted several flights at the airport on Wednesday. “The protesting staff are accusing the management of NiMet of failing to implement the N30,000 and N70,000 minimum wage, non-payment of staff allowances, ignoring requests to include omitted staff in past payments, and neglecting key training programmes, among other issues. “The association has given the management one month to implement the new minimum wage or face industrial action,” he stated. However, a senior NiMet management staff member, who pleaded not to be named, expressed frustration at the unions’ decision to down tools despite ongoing efforts to address their demands. “The management is disappointed with the hardline taken by the unions when some of the issues in dispute have been resolved, and others are in various stages of resolution. In a response given by management when the unions served it a strike notice, management stated all the issues and their status,” the official stated. The source noted the seeming contradiction in the unions’ actions, saying, “It is surprising that the unions resorted to strike action because the unions themselves recently wrote and thanked management for its labour-friendly policies. This makes you wonder if there are other motives or if there are people bent on sabotaging management.” Despite the impasse, NiMet management says it remains committed to resolving the crisis. “Management is not relenting in reaching an amicable resolution with the unions so that normal services will be restored. The Minister of Aviation and Aerospace Development, Festus Keyamo SAN, who has been supportive, has scheduled a meeting with all the parties on Thursday, April 24, 2025. We are hopeful that the unions will listen to reason. No one bites off his nose to spite his face,” the official stated. On the union side, the National Deputy President of the National Union of Air Transport Employees, Uzor Oluchi, decried the poor working conditions that NiMet staff face. “The welfare of NiMet staff is very poor. In fact, if you come to the aviation industry, NiMet staff are paid less. As I’m talking to you, a level 4 NiMet staff is collecting N31,000 despite the minimum wage that the Federal Government is giving,” she claimed.
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