People hold candles during a minute of silence during a protest at a park in Lagos, Nigeria, Thursday, Sept. 21, 2023, to demand justice for Afrobeat star Mohbad following his mysterious death. Thousands marched across Nigeria on Thursday over the mysterious death last week of an Afrobeat star whose body has been exhumed for an autopsy as authorities investigate the cause of his demise. (AP Photo/Sunday Alamba)

Internal memos and minutes from meetings show Shell lobbying senior government officials for military support, even after the security forces had carried out mass killings of protesters. They also show that on several occasions Shell provided logistical or financial assistance to military or police personnel when it was well aware that they had been involved in murderous attacks on defenceless villagers.


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AFP - France coach Raymond Domenech suffered another blow to his authority here on Tuesday as Nigeria beat France 1-0 in an international friendly.


Joseph Akpala scored the only goal of the game, the 22-year-old Club Brugge striker scoring in the 32nd minute after Ikechukwu Uche's shot had come off the bar and hit French goalkeeper Steve Mandanda's heel.


Domenech conceded that his side had lacked freshness, though he admitted the Nigerians had also had a long hard season, and that in the first-half especially his team had struggled to assert themselves.


"We suffered a little in terms of organisation in the first-half," said Domenech, who has come under increasing pressure since France went out of Euro 2008 at the first hurdle.


"We opted to play attacking football, to give the crowd pleasure without putting together a coherent strategy."


The crowd reacted furiously to the goal and started jeering and booing the French side, who had welcomed back from the international wilderness captain Patrick Vieira and Chelsea's Florent Malouda.


However, neither shone with Vieira especially static in midfield on what was a sad 107th appearance for the former Arsenal star.


Vieira, who has had another injury-ravaged season at Inter Milan, accepted that neither the team nor himself had played to their best potential.


"The result is bad. The match was difficult. We just weren't there in the first-half. We were not tactically strong," said Vieira.


"It was also a moderate match for me personally.


"I could have done better but I did the most I physically could."


The hosts failed to rouse their supporters and it took fully an hour for them to even summon up 'Allez les Bleus' (Come on the Blues) as with the exception of Franck Ribery and Nicolas Anelka few of the other players impressed.


Debutant Loic Remy went closest to levelling the match as the Nice striker's shot hit the post two minutes from the end.


Domenech was never going to be warmly received in St Etienne as he used to play for their bitter historical rivals Lyon.


Indeed when their names were announced over the public address system Domenech and present and past players of Lyon were greeted with jeers and boos from the spectators - and interest in the national side has slid so much that the ground was only two thirds full.


Domenech was furious with the way the crowd had behaved - they even cheered the Nigerians when they put together some passing movements in the first-half with chants of 'Ole! Ole!'.


"That (the booing) was not impressive, from the first minute, Karim Benzema, and the rest of the Lyon players were booed," commented Domenech.


"To confuse Lyon with the French team, is deplorable. This was not Lyon against St-Etienne: it was France against Nigeria, even if Nigeria play in green (St Etienne play in green as well)."


Vieira too was critical of the spectators.


"The whistles at the end of the match are comprehensible with regard to the team's performance," said Vieira.


"What really annoys me, though, is that Sidney (Govou) is jeered when he comes on, and the other Lyon players were booed whenever they touched the ball. People seem to forget that this is the French national football team."


As for the chants of 'Ole! Ole!' Domenech was more understanding.


"We were not good in the first-half," admitted Domenech.


"We allowed the Nigerians to pass the ball around, they could do as they liked, because we forgot the basics.


"I am just happy that at the moment we are playing friendlies and not for three points."


The crowd showed more decorum as they observed a minute's silence out of respect for the 228 passengers and crew of the Air France flight that disappeared over the Atlantic Ocean on its way from Rio de Janeiro to Paris on Monday.


France play a second friendly against Euro 2008 semi-finalists Turkey on Friday.

Solutions to this culture of silence are needed in politics and society. Experts call for better enforcement of laws against gender-based violence, more women in political positions and better medical services. But changing "the hearts and minds of men and boys" is the first step, according to UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres.

Dancing series (Dance in Video database) / Thirteen/WNET with RM Arts and BBC TV, 1993 - from this series, produced by Rhoda Grauer, the program entitled Lord of the Dance offers segments Dance of the Nigerian Christian Church (ca. 11 min.) and Dance of the Nigerian Osun Worship (ca. min.); the program entitled Dance at the Court presents Ashanti Court Dance, Ghana, West Africa (ca. 15 minutes, divided into two parts). CLICK "DETAILS" to access segments. A book, Dancing: the Pleasure, Power, and Art of Movement, by Gerald Jonas in association with Thirteen/WNET et al., accompanies this series.

The Ostrich (Dance in Video database) / Pennebaker Hegedus Films, 1984 - the source video, featuring the Dance Black America Festival at the Brooklyn Academy of Music, 1983, shows various companies, including the Alvin Ailey, learning African traditional dance; the video culminates in a performance of the Ostrich, choreographed in 1932 by Asadata Dafora, performed by Charles Moore. (Click on "Tracks," then "The Ostrich" to view the segment; the entire film is 87 minutes.)

Advancing calmly in the 58th minute in the opposition half, after being found by Matteo Kovacic, the defender thundered home a low 25-yard drive beyond Vicente Guaita to add Chelsea's third in a thoroughly one-sided display, before breaking down in teary celebration at the momentous moment.

Looking at the line-ups ahead of Spurs' opener against Manchester City on Sunday, the Anglo-Congolese defender appeared to have his work cut out -- did any player in the division have a tougher assignment than trying to silence Raheem Sterling and Jack Grealish on MD1?

He walked a fine line at times as he hassled and harried -- both the referee and Hugo Lloris had to remind Tanganga of the need to halt his fouling during a tempestuous first half -- but managed to silence both England internationals with a bold and aggressive display.

Against Villa, however, he was sensational, opening the scoring in the 10th minute after playing a one-two off Villa defender Ezri Konsa before burying the ball past Emiliano Martinez after being picked out by Ismaila Sarr.

It was Iwobi who made the breakthrough. Six minutes after his arrival, he nodded Seamus Coleman's dink towards the advancing Abdoulaye Doucoure, and the Franco-Malian midfielder slammed home into the top corner.

Already, they have determined his tattoo means that he is crazy, avagabond, and a hell-bound Akata--a term that negatively refers to thecultures of Western Blacks (not excluding children of continental Africanimmigrants). In two cases, he is made an example of what not to do as aparent with criticisms to his potential upbringing and threatening daughterswho would potentially date him. Dr. Jones reveals that the student is 16years old and a near 4.0 senior in his university. His tattoo is in homage tohis grandfather, Nelson Mandela. The participants are shocked into gasps andsilence by this revelation.

* Germany defeat Algeria 2-1, France beat Nigeria 2-0 * Suarez says sorry for bite, Robben admits diving * Cameroon to investigate World Cup match-fixing claims * World Cup goal tally surpasses total for 2010 tournament (Adds Cameroon match-fixing statement) By Andrew Cawthorne BELO HORIZONTE, Brazil, June 30 (Reuters) - Germany and France snuffed out African hopes and reached the World Cup quarter-finals on Monday with hard-won victories over Algeria and Nigeria, while Uruguay striker Luis Suarez broke his silence to apologise for biting. Both European powerhouses struggled for their wins, France needing late goals to see off African champions Nigeria 2-0 and Germany only securing their 2-1 victory over Algeria in extra time. Germany and France will meet in the last eight on Friday, while disappointed Africans have no teams left to support. It was the first time two African teams had reached the second round, but both went out within hours of each other to leave the continent still struggling to make an impact on the biggest stage. In Porto Alegre, the sides were deadlocked at 0-0 after 90 minutes in a frantic end-to-end match in which Algeria goalkeeper Rais Mbolhi pulled off some fantastic saves but swift counter-attacks also gave the north Africans chances to win. With the score 0-0 at full time, German substitute Andre Schuerrle deftly flicked in a low cross, before Mesut Ozil added a second in the last minute. There was still time for an Algerian consolation goal, by Abdelmoumene Djabou. It was no more than they deserved but not enough to prevent heartbreak at the final whistle. "The Algerians did a good job, they disrupted us from the start and didn't let us get into our game. But it doesn't matter how we won," Schuerrle said. The result kept Germany's enviable record of reaching at least the quarter-finals in every World Cup they have played in since 1938. It also denied Algeria revenge for a dark chapter in 1982 when, despite beating then West Germany, they went out after a seemingly contrived result between the Germans and Austria. "We showed the whole world that Algeria has a great team," defender Madjid Bougherra said. "We fought all the way. At the start of Ramadan, we did a great job representing Algeria." FRANCE STRIKE LATE Earlier in Brasilia, France, seeking to make up for a humiliating early exit four years ago, left it late to break down a tough Nigeria, scoring twice in the last 11 minutes. "Super Eagles" goalkeeper Vincent Enyeama, who had been excellent until then, flapped at a corner in the 79th minute, leaving Paul Pogba an open goal to head into after French pressure had built steadily in the second half. "It's one of the best moments of my life," Pogba said. 'Les Bleus' struck again at the death when Nigeria defender Joseph Yobo skewed a cross into his own goal. Nigeria, who have never been beyond the last 16, had the better of the first half in a rough game that swung France's way after the Africans' influential midfielder Ogenyi Onazi was carried off following a late studs-up tackle by Blaise Matuidi. Adding to a miserable day for Africa, Cameroon's football federation said it was to investigate claims of match-fixing at the World Cup, especially their game against Croatia. Cameroon lost all three group matches, including a 4-0 defeat by Croatia. On a happier note, Monday's goals took the tournament tally to 150, surpassing the 145 scored in the whole 2010 World Cup. SUAREZ APOLOGISES, ROBBEN CONFESSES Off the pitch, it was again Suarez making the headlines - though this time for the right reasons. In a contrite statement from Uruguay, the volatile striker said he had time to reflect on his biting of an Italian defender. "I ask for the forgiveness of Giorgio Chiellini and all the football family," he said, vowing it would never happen again. Nevertheless, Uruguay's President Jose Mujica upped the ante over the saga, calling FIFA bosses "sons of bitches" for giving a "fascist" punishment of a four-month football ban to Suarez. Controversy also swirled over another forward seldom out of the headlines, Dutchman Arjen Robben. All of Mexico was still fuming at Robben's tumble that earned a last-ditch penalty to put the Netherlands through on Sunday. Mexican fans excoriated and mocked him mercilessly on social media, some depicting an arm-flailing Robben leaping into the sea off rocks at a famous diving spot in Acapulco. Robben, 30, fanned the controversy further by insisting the tackle from Mexican captain Rafael Marquez was a penalty, but confessing he had dived in another incident. "In the first half I went to ground without being fouled, without being touched and that was a stupid action," he said. "I am an honest guy ... I apologise." FIFA said there was unlikely to be any retrospective action, drawing accusations of hypocrisy given the punishment to Suarez. There was a one-match ban for another miscreant, Brazil's senior press official Rodrigo Paiva who got into a half-time fracas with Chile striker Mauricio Pinilla in the last-16 clash. The fallout from Ghana's disastrous World Cup continued, with midfielder Kevin-Prince Boateng saying preparations had been a "nightmare". Ghana exited with one point in three games and Boateng was suspended for a row with his coach. "I would have never thought a World Cup preparation could be organised that badly. Everything was amateurish," he said. Tuesday offers two trans-Atlantic clashes. Belgium's young side are an outside bet for the title and certainly favourites to beat the United States, but Juergen Klinsmann has his charges fired up and super-fit. A Lionel Messi-led Argentina should have little trouble dispatching Switzerland, but underdogs have thrown plenty of surprises in this most fascinating of World Cups. (Additional reporting by Mike Collett, Karolos Grohmann, Angus MacSwan, Brian Homewood, Erik Kirschbaum in Brazil, Alexandra Ulmer in Santiago, Malena Castaldi in Montevideo, editing by Ed Osmond) ff782bc1db

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