back to top
Friday, January 16, 2026
advertise with us
Home Blog Page 112

Twitter Adds ‘Fleets’: Posts To Disappear After 24 Hours

Twitter Adds ‘Fleets’: Posts To Disappear After 24 Hours

Twitter said Tuesday it was rolling out tweets which disappear after 24 hours, joining rival social platforms in offering ephemeral messages.

The new “fleets” which had been tested in several countries in recent months are “for sharing momentary thoughts” and aim to bring in users who want to avoid having their comments become permanent fixtures, according to a Twitter blog post.

“Those new to Twitter found fleets to be an easier way to share what’s on their mind,” said product manager Sam Haveson and design director Joshua Harris in the blog post.

“Because they disappear from view after a day, fleets helped people feel more comfortable sharing personal and casual thoughts, opinions, and feelings.”

The move gives Twitter a new tool in competing with the likes of Snapchat, which made disappearing messages popular, and Facebook, which has also adopted the idea.

Twitter has become an important platform for politicians, celebrities and journalists, but it has lagged other social networks in users.

In the past quarter it reported 187 million “monetizable” daily active users, trailing Snapchat and Facebook.

Twitter said the new format would allow users to create the same kinds messages as in ordinary tweets, including images, videos and emojis, with the option to have the message disappear.

“Your followers can see your fleets at the top of their home timeline,” Haveson and Harris said.

“Anyone who can see your full profile can see your fleets there too.”

Twitter has been testing the new format in Brazil, Italy, India and South Korea and learned that “we saw people with fleets talk more on Twitter.”

Passive To Active
Twitter’s research director Nikkia Reveillac said the new format was aimed at helping people move from a passive to an active role in the Twitter conversation.

“People must feel comfortable and in control” to participate in the conversation, Reveillac told journalists.

“What we learned when we talk to people is that… engaging in conversation can honestly be incredibly terrifying… And we know that this is true in real life. And we know that it is true online.”

Harris told journalists the move is expected to boost engagement at Twitter.

“Lurking and drafting are cool, but for Twitter to really serve the public conversation, people need to feel comfortable having conversation with less pressure,” he said.

“And it might seem like we’re a little late to the game on this but we’ve been thoughtful and exploring the format and how it works for people on Twitter. And we realized through market test research that it makes sense for our platform.”

Another new feature rolling out next year is the “voice tweet,” or audio recording which takes the place of text and has been tested in the past few months.

“Sometimes, 280 characters just does not cut it,” product designer Maya Gold Patterson said.

“And sometimes tweeting isn’t the right way of communicating at the moment. And so we were interested in exploring how audio could help add an additional layer to the public conversation.”

Patterson said that “hearing the empathy, emotion and nuance in someone’s voice could help people connect on a different level” than in a simple text tweet.

She noted that voice tweets may also be used by brands to better connect with customers and by journalists to explain their stories.

AFP

Peru Gets New President As Congress Tries To Resolve Crisis

Peru Gets New President As Congress Tries To Resolve Crisis
Francisco Sagasti

Peru’s Congress on Monday chose a 76-year-old former World Bank official as the South American country’s new president — the third in a rollercoaster week of political upheaval.

Francisco Sagasti was elected as lawmakers met to try to move on from a crippling political crisis, sparked by the impeachment of a popular president and the resignation of his controversial successor amid protests that killed two people.

Sagasti, from the centrist Morado party, will serve as interim president until the end of July 2021, completing the mandate of Martin Vizcarra, whose impeachment by Congress last Monday set off a snowballing crisis.

“What our country lacks at the moment is confidence. Trust us, we will act as we say,” Sagasti said before Congress.

“When a Peruvian dies, and even more so if he is young, it is all of Peru that mourns. And if he dies defending democracy, the mourning is aggravated by indignation,” he added, referring to the two protesters who died.

The gray-bearded former engineer is no political veteran, however, having been elected to Congress only in March this year.

He will be sworn in at a special congressional session on Tuesday.

His predecessor, former Congress speaker Manuel Merino, was forced to resign on Sunday after days of street protests culminated the day before in the death of two people.

As speaker of Congress, he was next in line, as the post of vice president was vacant.

Congress, half of whose members face criminal inquiries, remains deeply unpopular over its removal of Vizcarra.

Comments from Mirtha Vasquez, who was elected speaker of Congress in the same session, were clearly aimed at seeking to open a new chapter.

“I thank the population for all the effort. We regret the death of two citizens. This generation of young people has given us a lesson in how to redirect the destiny of the state,” Vasquez said.

Many in the streets opposed what they said was a parliamentary coup against Vizcarra, who won popular backing over pledges to root out entrenched corruption in Peruvian politics since assuming power in 2018.

However, he eventually fell afoul of opponents in Congress, where he lacked a party of his own, as well as a solid majority. Sagasti’s Morado party was the only one that voted against Vizcarra’s impeachment.

Second Attempt
Monday’s meeting of Congress was its second attempt to agree on a president, and Sagasti was applauded by the session once he secured the minimum 60 votes required.

A consensus candidate, the political novice emerged after the legislature failed to agree in a first meeting Sunday on a leftist rival, Rocio Silva Santisteban.

Sagasti, nicknamed Don Quixote for his scraggy appearance, in the end won 97 of the 130 votes.

Among the first to congratulate him was Santisteban, who tweeted: “Don Quixote Sagasti is the new president of Peru! Now let’s work against corruption and the political crisis.”

Vizcarra also wished the new president well: “I congratulate Francisco Sagasti on his election as President of Parliament. Only a person with democratic principles will be able to face the difficult situation that the country is going through,” he tweeted.

Merino announced he was stepping down Sunday, following an ultimatum from Congress for him to quit or face censure. His announcement sparked loud celebrations in the streets of Lima.

Public prosecutors said Monday they have opened an investigation into Merino and his interior minister after police were condemned for brutally suppressing the protests.

They face investigation “for abuse of authority and intentional homicide” over the death of the two protesters, apparently from shotgun pellets fired by police, state prosecutor Zoraida Avalos said.

Merino’s chief of staff, Antero Flores-Araoz, is also facing inquiry.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said in a statement he was “deeply disturbed” by the violent crackdown.

Vizcarra, 57, welcomed his rival’s resignation as the departure of a “dictatorship” from the presidential palace, having questioned the legality of his dismissal last week.

Despite Congress choosing Sagasti on Monday, there may yet be another twist in the tale, as Vizcarra has challenged his dismissal in the Constitutional Court and is still awaiting the ruling.

Some lawmakers questioned the wisdom of removing Vizcarra in the midst of the coronavirus pandemic and a crippling recession.

The pandemic has hit Peru hard, with the politically fragile country having the world’s highest per capita death rate — with nearly 35,000 fatalities — and GDP plunging more than 30 percent in the second quarter.

Vizcarra had broad support since succeeding Pedro Pablo Kuczynski, the former Wall Street banker who was forced to resign under threat of impeachment over corruption allegations in 2018.

Congress impeached and dismissed Vizcarra over allegations he took kickbacks from developers when he was governor of the Moquegua region in 2014, charges he denies.

#EndSARS Protest: Court Grants Eromosele Adene Bail

#EndSARS Protest: Court Grants Eromosele Adene Bail

The Yaba Magistrates Court, Lagos, on Tuesday, granted bail to detained #EndSARS protester, Eromosele Adene, in the sum of N1m.

The magistrate ruled against an application filed by the policemen attached to the State Criminal Investigation Department seeking to remand Adene for an extra 30 days.

Eromosele’s lawyer, Tunde Jinadu, on Tuesday said his client has been granted bail.

Jinadu had approached the court to grant his client bail on medical ground.

The policemen had last week arrested Eromosele in Ikeja and taken him to the police command headquarters and then transferred him to the Area F Command before detaining him at the SCID, Panti. He was last Monday flown to Abuja and detained for seven days before being brought back to Lagos on Sunday.

However, rather than charge him, the policemen secretly approached a Magistrate, O.A Salau, without the consent of his lawyer and applied for a remand order to detain him for an extra 30 days.

Tempers flared earleir on Tuesday as security operatives barred the protester’s family members and other supporters from the courtroom.

#EndSARS: The Opportunity Must Not Be Lost

#EndSARS: The Opportunity Must Not Be Lost

We applaud the #EndSARS movement for its consistency in demanding an end to police brutality and championing reform of the Nigeria Police – a demand which has been trending since 2017.

The most recent peaceful protests (October 8 – 20 2020) captured the imagination, pride, and support of millions of Nigerians across the world and have provided a new model for organizing peaceful protests that will be studied for years to come.

The protest and protesters were well organized, organic, empathetic, and provided a strong and inspiring narrative of Nigerians being unified, caring, and giving. Some of the approaches employed included providing: whistles for female protesters to sound the alarm in case of trouble, looking after and returning missing items, traffic wardens watered and fed, and over 500 lawyers volunteering to represent and seek the release of protesters from jail. We applaud the horizontal leadership structure of the protests which confused the old-guard looking for leaders to compromise and which drew the ire of those out of touch with the evolving nature of leading protests grounded in social justice, successfully used in Hong Kong and Belarus. This is the future and young Nigerians, are in tune.

The five demands of the #EndSARS movement are: (i) immediate release of all Nigerians arrested and being detained for exercising their constitutional rights; (ii) justice for all victims of police brutality and negligence and appropriate compensation; (iii) set up of an independent body to oversee the investigation and prosecution of all reports of police misconduct; (iv) psychological evaluation and retraining of all disbanded SARS officers before they can be redeployed; and (iv) increasing police salary so that our police are adequately compensated for securing our safety.

Police reform has been a constant feature of Nigeria’s democracy and Nigerians relationship with oppressive governments and governments unwillingness to meet the logical, and justified demands of Nigerians speak to a deeper malaise in our society: impunity, disdain for citizens, and governance structures designed to exploit. Since colonial times, the general ethos of the police has not changed. However, with the Police Act 2020 which puts protection of human rights at the core of its mandate, there might be an opportunity to ensure meaningful reforms in the Nigeria Police if the Act is properly interpreted, implemented, and operationalized.

The government cannot shy away from properly funding, equipping, training, and supporting appropriate accountability processes in the Nigeria Police, if the organization and its personnel are to be effective. This should be complemented by ensuring systematic justice where we normalize punishing erring police officers who arrest, kill, and rob innocent Nigerians and pay damages routinely to families of victims and survivors, this will help create narratives of a just nation that we sorely need.

This administration has the opportunity to build the foundation blocks for a culture of justice in Nigeria by (i) meeting the five demands of the #EndSARS protesters (ii) tasking the presidential panel on police reform to start with the existing reports on police reform, including ensuring the recommendations of the National Human Rights Commission are executed, (iii) providing an independent investigation into the conduct of the Nigerian military and Nigeria Police at the Lagos Lekki Toll Gate on 20.10.2020, (iv) ensuring an immediate end to arbitrary arrests and daily brutalization of Nigerians and (vi) protecting freedom of speech and valuing social media for its ability to serve as an early warning on the mood of the largest demographic in Nigeria.

The loss of lives over the last few weeks is tragic and inexcusable and our sympathies are with the families and friends of all victims. While the destruction of property was unnecessary and irresponsible, the states and federal governments must take responsibility and pay compensation for the losses suffered by private citizens. Nigerian governments must do the right thing.

Princess Hamman-Obels, Idayat Hassan, ‘Kemi Okenyodo, and Ayisha Osori wrote on behalf of Alternative Voices for a Better Nigeria.

SENATE: NASS Members Never Had Palliatives To Hide

SENATE: NASS Members Never Had Palliatives To Hide

The Chairman, Senate Committee on Media and Public Affairs, Senator Ajibola Basiru, has said no member of the National Assembly was hoarding palliatives meant for distribution to Nigerians in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The Director, Media and Publicity of the Muhammadu Buhari 2019 Presidential Campaign Committee, Kailani Muhammad, had  alleged that the lawmakers and some governors were hoarding palliatives.

Basiru in a statement on Monday described the allegations as either wicked lies or deliberate  misinformation on the part of  Kailani.

He said, “While not speaking for the governors, I make bold to say that no federal lawmaker and indeed, no Senator received any kobo from Mr President or any food stuff or any material for that matter, talk less of hoarding them.

“Rather at the Senate, we donated half of members’ salaries for the purpose of cushioning the effect of COVID 19.

“We legislators equally played our part by purchasing and distributing palliatives to people at our different constituencies.

“So it is quite unfortunate for Kilani Mohammed or anyone to castigate us in the public and saying what is not true,” he said.

Basiru however cautioned against “deliberate falsehood to paint Federal Lawmakers in bad light for whatever motive.”

NAPTIP: 414 Cases Reported, 38 Sexual Offenders Convicted In One Year

NAPTIP: 414 Cases Reported, 38 Sexual Offenders Convicted In One Year

The National Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons says it has secured the conviction of no fewer than 38 sexual offenders in the last year across the country.

The Director-General of NAPTIP, Mrs Julie Okah-Donli, disclosed this on Monday in Enugu during the training of stakeholders and members of state task forces on human trafficking in the South East, Vanguard reports.

Okah-Donli said the 38 people were those recorded in its register between November 2019 and November 2020. She said that the essence of the sexual offender register, launched in November 2019, was to name and shame sexual offenders in the country.

“As at last week, a total of 38 convicted people have been documented in the register with 414 cases reported and 108 fingerprints digitally captured,” she said.

On human trafficking, Okah-Donli said that the outbreak of the Coronavirus pandemic posed a great challenge to the crusade against the crime.

“Some heartless human traffickers are already taking advantage of the situation to deceive and recruit vulnerable youths and traffic them. Therefore, we must re-strategise and double efforts in curbing the menace,” the director-general said.

Okah-Donli said that NAPTIP, in conjunction with state governments and with the support of the International Organisation for Migration (IOM) and other partners, had between 2019 and 2020 inaugurated State Task Forces on Human Trafficking.

She said that the workshop was aimed at equipping members of the task forces with the necessary skills to curtail incidences of human trafficking.

“The state task forces on human trafficking are strategic instruments that NAPTIP adopted to harness counter-trafficking efforts at the sub-national level.

“It will create important synergies in the fight against human trafficking in the country,” she said. The NAPTIP boss said that no fewer than 443 traffickers had been convicted while about 17, 000 victims rescued by the agency,” she said.

Five Corps Members Test Positive For Coronavirus

Five Corps Members Test Positive For Coronavirus

The Coordinator, National Youth Service Corps, Federal Capital Territory, Mrs Walida Isa, says five prospective corps members have tested positive for COVID -19.

Isa made the disclosure at the swearing-in of the 2020 Batch `B’ Stream 1 corps members on Monday in Abuja.

The coordinator, who did not disclose their names, said that 853 corps members were registered after they were tested for the virus.

She said that 858 corps members were tested for COVID- 19 and out of the number, five of them were positive.

“The five that were positive were taken to the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control for treatment. So they are not among the number we registered,” she said.

The 2020 Batch `B’ Stream 1A orientation resumed camping on November 10.

One week was used to test the corps members on COVID-19 before registration.

The 2020 Batch `B’ Stream 1A orientation course started on Tuesday nationwide in strict compliance to COVID-19 protocols.

In her opening remarks, Hajiya Ramatu Aliyu, the Minister of State, called for support for the scheme to enable it sustain its laudable programmes for the benefit of the country.

Aliyu was represented by the Acting Chairman, NYSC FCT Governing Board, Mr Kevin Ike.

The minister reiterated the administration`s readiness to continue to support the scheme for effective service delivery.

She also commended the scheme for promoting unity, integration as well as development in the education, health, and agriculture sectors among others.

(NAN)

How Aubameyang, Gabon teammates slept on Gambia airport floor ahead of AFCON match

How Aubameyang, Gabon teammates slept on Gambia airport floor ahead of AFCON match

Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang and his Gabon teammates were forced to spend the night sleeping on the airport floor ahead of their vital 2021 Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON) qualifier against Gambia.

Aubameyang used social media to highlight their plight after arriving at Banjul airport on Sunday, ahead of Monday’s Group D clash in the Gambian capital.

The Gabon delegation were told they were not allowed to leave the airport because of an administrative problem.

They were forced to sleep on the floor before being allowed to leave in the morning after government intervention.

No reason was given for not allowing the team to exit the airport and head to their hotel after arrival.

Even by previous standards of gamesmanship in African football, this was unusual.

Gabon’s football federation posted pictures of the incident of its Facebook page but without any comment.

“Nice job CAF, it’s as if we were back in the 1990s,” Aubameyang posted on Twitter in a reference to previous foibles blamed on the Confederation of African Football (CAF).

“This will not demotivate us, but people need to know and CAF need to take responsibility.

“(It is) 2020 and we want Africa to grow, but this is not how we will get there,” the Arsenal striker added later.

Gabon are top of the group standings, three points ahead of Gambia, who are seeking to reach the Nations Cup finals for the first time.

The top two teams in the group —- which also includes Angola and the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) —- advance to the finals in Cameroon in early 2022.

(Reuters/NAN)

I saw corpse with bullet-torn head, protester recounts ordeal from Lekki shooting to panel

I saw corpse with bullet-torn head, protester recounts ordeal from Lekki shooting to panel

An #EndSARS protester, Kamsiyochukwu Perpetual, has said she saw many dead bodies, including one with a bullet-torn head, following the alleged shootings at peaceful #EndSARS protesters by soldiers at the Lekki tollgate on the night of October 20.

In a petition she submitted to the Lagos State Panel of Judicial Inquiry probing the tollgate shootings by soldiers, Perpetual said she saw the dead body with bullet-torn head at Reddington Hospital, Lekki, when she went in search of injured protesters the morning after the shootings.

Perpetual said she visited the hospital in company with one Samuel Isah and another person identified as Seye, with the aim of collecting the data of injured protesters but doctors at the hospital prevent them until a media man; “World Rapper Man” intervened.

“We also requested to see the dead protesters who were brought in. The doctors refused us access to see the dead bodies. The media man intervened again and we could only see one of the dead bodies whose head was torn by (a) bullet fired to his head. He laid at the emergency unit. The doctor called the corpse ‘John Doe’.

“While at Reddington Hospital, dead and injured bodies were still being brought in. By evening when I returned to Reddington Hospital, one of the nurses informed me that the dead and the injured had been transferred from Reddington Hospital to an unknown hospital based on orders from above.

“We have the record of the names of 22 injured persons and one of the dead persons we were allowed to see,” Perpetual said in her affidavit on oath filed before the retired Justice Doris Okuwobi-led panel.

In her 28-paragraph affidavit, she gave the names of the 22 persons injured from the shooting incident as Abiola Esther, RFK, Lekan Williams, Felix Nandip, Adams Moses, Akinyele Damilola, Samuela Iordyom, Emmanuel John, Isaac Amede and Charles Uzoma.

Other listed were Raymond Simon Abah, Samuel Anthony, Andrew Ugochuckwu, Bobby Maduka, Moses Oyi, Emmanuel George, Nelson Andrew, Sheriff Akande, Chigozie Chukwujekwu, Damilola Adedayo and 12-year-old Bakare Michael.

While the Nigerian Army had insisted that only blank bullets were shot into the air, Perpetual in her affidavit maintained that soldiers shot at and killed protesters.

“I saw soldiers picking at least seven dead, limp bodies hit by bullet into their vans,” Perpetual said.

Marvel Breaks Silence On The Late Chadwick Boseman’s Appearance In Black Panther 2

Marvel Breaks Silence On The Late Chadwick Boseman's Appearance In Black Panther 2

After Chadwick Boseman’s shocking and untimely death in August, fans will be relieved to know that his memory will be respected in the Marvel Cinematic Universe going forward.

An executive producer involved with the Black Panther franchise at Marvel Studios has confirmed that a Computer-Generated Image double of the actor will not be used when production on sequel Black Panther II begins, DailyMail reports.

Since Chadwick’s passing at age 43 after a private struggle with colon cancer, the big question has been how the Black Panther franchise will continue without its titular, King T’Challa.

Not only would the use of a CGI double be costly with likely artificial results, but it would also brush aside the fact that the actor had passed away in real life.

Speaking to the Argentinian newspaper Clarin, as reported by The Wrap, Marvel’s Victoria Alonso said, “No. There’s only one Chadwick and he’s not with us,”

When asked about the prospect of a digital recreation of the fallen star. Alonso said, “Our king, unfortunately, has died in real life, not just in fiction, and we are taking a little time to see how we return to the story and what we do to honour this chapter of what has happened to us that was so unexpected, so painful, so terrible, really.

“Because Chadwick was not only a wonder of a human being every day for the five years that we spent together but it also seems to me that as a character what he did elevated us as a company and has left his moment in history.”

Boseman made his debut as the Black Panther in 2016’s Captain America: Civil War, and went on to reprise the role in 2018’s Black Panther, along with Avengers: Infinity War that same year as well as 2019’s Avengers: Endgame.

Little did anyone know that the star was privately battling stage III colon cancer, which then progressed to stage IV.

“We have to think carefully about what we are going to do and think about how we are going to honour the franchise,” Alonso said.