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  • 6
    Feb
    2013
    6:18pm, EST

    Malians gather for Cup of Nations semifinal soccer match against Nigeria

    Pascal Guyot / AFP - Getty Images

    Malian supporters watch on Feb. 6, on a television in the center of the northern Malian city of Douentza a 2013 African Cup of Nations semi-final football match between Mali and Nigeria in Durban, South Africa.

    Ben Stansall / AFP - Getty Images

    Mali's defender Mahamadou Ndiaye (L) vies with Nigeria's forward Ahmed Musa (C) during the 2013 African Cup of Nations semi-final football match Mali vs Nigeria on Feb. 6, in Durban. Nigeria won 4-1.

    By Richard Farley, NBC Sports

    Published at 6:15pm ET: The match always had the potential for goals, but few would have predicted such a lopsided result. With four goals in a 35-minute span starting mid-first half, Nigeria qualified for their first Africa Cup of Nations final in 13 years, eliminating Mali 4-1.

    In some ways the result was just as impressive as Sunday’s quarterfinal defeat of tournament favorites Cote d’Ivoire. While the Malians are not held in the same regard as Les Elephants, the Super Eagles put on a more impressive show, leaving little doubt the project initiated by Stephen Keshi — one that left many of the team’s highest profile, most-capped players out — has come good.

    Continue reading.

    Related:

    • Banned no longer: Soccer brings joy, hope to war-ravaged Mali
    • Full soccer coverage from NBC Sports

    Sunday Alamba / AP

    Nigeria soccer fans celebrate after Nigeria soccer player Elderson Echiejile scored a goal against Mali, during an African Cup of Nations semi final match in Lagos, Nigeria, on Feb. 6. Nigeria cruised to a 4-1 win over Mali on Wednesday to reach the African Cup final for the first time in more than a decade.

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

     

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  • 15
    Jan
    2013
    12:15pm, EST

    Oil thieves tap into Nigeria's black gold

    Akintunde Akinleye / Reuters

    A passenger speedboat churns up the water, while in the background an illegal oil refinery is left burning after an earlier military chase, in a windy creek near the Nun River in Bayelsa on Dec. 6, 2012.

    Akintunde Akinleye / Reuters

    A man works at an illegal oil refinery site near the Nun River in Bayelsa on Nov. 27, 2012.

    Akintunde Akinleye / Reuters

    A locally made boat containing crude oil is maneuvered through a creek near the Nun River in Bayelsa on Dec. 6, 2012.

    Akintunde Akinleye / Reuters

    A worker pours crude oil into a locally made burner using a funnel at an illegal oil refinery site near the Nun River in Bayelsa on Nov. 25, 2012.

    By Akintunde Akinleye, Reuters

    Here and there on the banks, people coated in oil wade through greasy mud in patches of landscape blackened and stripped of the thick vegetation that makes Nigeria's oil-producing delta so hard to police. Plumes of grey or yellow smoke fill the air as men who will give only their first names go to work in an illegal industry that the government says lifts a fifth of Nigeria's output of two million barrels a day.

    Oil 'bunkering' -- hacking into pipelines to steal crude then refining it or selling it abroad -- has become a major cost to Nigeria's treasury, which depends on oil for 80 percent of its earnings.

    Major General Johnson Ochoga, who leads a military campaign against bunkering that was stepped up last year under orders from President Goodluck Jonathan, told Reuters nearly 2,000 suspects had been arrested and 4,000 refineries, 30,000 drums of products and hundreds of bunkering boats destroyed in 2012.

    Yet the complicity of security officials and politicians who profit from the practice, and the lack of alternatives for those who undertake it, cast doubt on the likelihood of success.

    Read the full story.

    Editor's note: Reuters made these pictures available to NBC News on Jan. 15.

    Akintunde Akinleye / Reuters

    A warning sign belonging to the company Royal Dutch Shell is seen along the Nembe Creek in Bayelsa on Dec. 2, 2012.

    Akintunde Akinleye / Reuters

    A man named Godswill works at an illegal oil refinery site, where steam rises from pipes carrying refined oil from a burner into broken containers, near the Nun River in Bayelsa on Nov. 27, 2012.

    Akintunde Akinleye / Reuters

    A man named Godswill collects crude oil from a mini storage unit filled with oil, which is waiting to be refined at an illegal refinery site near the Nun River in Bayelsa on Nov. 27, 2012.

    Akintunde Akinleye / Reuters

    Ebiowei, 48, pours water to reduce the intensity of the fire in a locally-made burner at an illegal oil refinery site near the Nun River on Nov. 27, 2012.

    Akintunde Akinleye / Reuters

    A closed fuel station is seen in the Ahoada community near Nigeria's oil hub city of Port Harcourt on Dec. 6, 2012.

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

     

    Previously on PhotoBlog:

    • Extremes of wealth and poverty revealed in photos of Nigerian oil industry
    • Pipeline explosion kills at least 3 in Nigeria
    • Wicked wicker car wows in Nigeria
    • Smoldering scene in Lagos, Nigeria after plane crash
    • Secret prison in the jungle on Nigerian island
    • Thousands of Nigerians protest fuel prices, as government fears 'anarchy'

    4 comments

    It looks much classier when WE rape the environment.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: oil, nigeria, africa, environment, world-news
  • 13
    Jan
    2013
    4:49pm, EST

    Akintunde Akinleye / Reuters

    Pipeline explosion kills at least 3 in Nigeria

    A man paddles a canoe through a swamp after an oil pipeline explosion caused by people who tried to steal fuel at Arepo village, just outside Nigeria's commercial capital of Lagos, Jan. 13. At least three people were seen dead, according to a Reuters witness.

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  • 10
    Jan
    2013
    5:41pm, EST

    Wicked wicker car wows in Nigeria

    Akintunde Akinleye / Reuters

    People look at the interior of a car covered with woven raffia palm cane parked along a road in Ibadan, southwest Nigeria, on Jan. 10.

    A car covered with woven raffia palm cane is parked in front of an artisan's workshop in Ibadan, southwest Nigeria, on Jan. 10. The car appears to be a form of mobile advertising for the artisan's services.

    Akintunde Akinleye / Reuters

    Artisan Ojo Obaniyi, 40, weaves a cover with raffia palm cane for a wheel plate at his workshop in Ibadan.

    Previously on PhotoBlog:

    • Mumbai taxi drivers bid farewell to an icon of the road
    • An Aston Martin you can afford, but just can't fit in
    • Homemade Lamborghini replica draws admiring glances from Chinese drivers

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

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    Explore related topics: nigeria, car, africa, world-news, cane, wicker
  • 26
    Dec
    2012
    9:30am, EST

    Blaze consumes Nigerian warehouse, nearby homes

    Jon Gambrell / AP

    A fire truck passes a warehouse on fire on Lagos Island in Lagos, Nigeria, on Dec. 26.

    An explosion ripped through a warehouse Wednesday where witnesses say fireworks were stored in Nigeria's largest city, sparking a fire. It wasn't immediately clear if anyone was injured in the blast that firefighters and locals struggled to contain.

    -- The Associated Press

    Sunday Alamba / AP

    People try to contain a fire at residential homes and a warehouse on Lagos Island in Lagos, Nigeria, on Dec. 26.

    Pius Utomi Ekpei / AFP - Getty Images

    Policemen collect debris for examination at the scene of an explosion in a building in Lagos on Dec. 26.

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    An explosion at a fireworks warehouse in Nigeria killed a young boy and injured several others. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    Previously on PhotoBlog:

    • Smoldering scene in Lagos, Nigeria after plane crash
    • 153 people feared dead in Nigerian plane crash
    • Secret prison in the jungle on Nigerian island
    • Abandoned ships litter Nigeria coastline
    • At least four killed as two bombs hit Nigeria newspaper offices

    Comment

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    Explore related topics: nigeria, fire, world-news, fireworks, lagos
  • 4
    Jun
    2012
    12:58pm, EDT

    Smoldering scene in Lagos, Nigeria after plane crash

    Arewa Emmanuel / AFP - Getty Images

    Rescue workers and firefighters work to contain a fire while they continue to look for survivors at the scene of the crashed Dana Airline plane in the densely populated Toyin Area of Iju Ishaga in Lagos, on June 4. The flight that crashed in Nigeria's largest city of Lagos, reported both of its engines failed before it went down.

    Sunday Alamba / AP

    Rescue workers carry bodies at the site of a plane crash in Lagos, Nigeria, Monday, June 4. Firefighters pulled at least one body from a building that was damaged by the crash as several charred corpses could be seen in the rubble.

    Akintunde Akinleye / Reuters

    People watch as a crane lifts the remnants of the tail of the plane at Iju-Ishaga neighborhood in Lagos June 4. Nigerian emergency services pulled more bodies out of the still-smouldering, ash-covered wreckage of a plane that crashed killing all 153 people on board.

    Sunday Alamba / AP

    A rescue worker search through the debris at the site of a plane crash in Lagos, Nigeria, Monday, June 4. A passenger plane carrying more than 150 people crashed in Nigeria's largest city on Sunday, government officials said. Firefighters pulled at least one body from a building that was damaged by the crash and searched for survivors.

    AP reports:  LAGOS, Nigeria — Police dogs sniffed for dead bodies Monday in the rubble of buildings destroyed when an airliner crashed into them, killing all 153 aboard, as cranes lifted away heavy pieces of debris in the grisly aftermath of Nigeria's worst air disaster in nearly two decades.

    Rescue officials said they fear many more people may have perished on the ground. Continue reading...

    Story: Engine problems eyed after passenger jet crashes in Nigeria suburb

    9 comments

    I cannot believe these thing are happening. Syria, Baghdad, India train and now this airplane. Not for lack of it, but can someone call WHO, and the medics? They care and should be on the scene, pending the necessity of care for the injured.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: nigeria, plane-crash, world-news, lagos
  • 3
    Jun
    2012
    1:59pm, EDT

    153 people feared dead in Nigerian plane crash

    CKN via AFP - Getty Images

    Residents of the Iju district of Lagos, Nigeria, gather at the site where a Dana company aircraft crashed into a two-story building on June 3.

    CKN / AFP - Getty Images

    Residents of the Iju district of Lagos are seen a few moments after the crash.

    Nigerian authorities said Sunday that as many as 153 people were aboard a Dana Airlines passenger jet that crashed into a two-story building in Lagos, the country's largest city. "I don't believe there are any survivors," said Harold Denuren, Nigeria's director of aviation

    Authorities said that in addition to the passengers and crew aboard the plane, an unknown number of people may also have been killed or hurt on the ground. President Goodluck Jonathan canceled all appointments for Monday and declared three days of official mourning for the victims.

    -- Reported by M. Alex Johnson of msnbc.com

    Read the full story.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    1 comment

    I hope all the people survived. What a tragedy!

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    Explore related topics: nigeria, crash, aviation, world-news, lagos
  • 11
    May
    2012
    7:47pm, EDT

    Secret prison in the jungle on Nigerian island

    Sunday Alamba / AP

    A man swalk past a sign post at the former prison known as Tekunle on Ita Oko Island outside of Lagos, Nigeria. The prison is cut out of the dense jungle that engulfs this island outside of Nigeria's largest city, but it never officially existed although many critics of the nation's military rule were kept here. Ita Oko Island allowed Nigeria's military governments to have opponents disappear into the swamps of the Lekki Lagoon at a camp accessible only by boat and helicopter.

    Jon Gambrell / AP

    A message on a wall at the prison on Ita Oka Island.

    Sunday Alamba / AP

    Associated Press team shields from rain as they travel to the former prison known as Tekunle on Ita Oko Island.

    Sunday Alamba / AP

    The remains of a burnt down part of a former prison known as Tekunle on Ita Oko Island outside of Lagos, Nigeria.

    The Associated Press reports that anyone deemed a security risk by the government could be imprisoned:

    Those deemed to be a major risk politically found themselves taken to Ita Oko by helicopter, where they worked on the farm and had no contact with the outside world, Agbakoba said. Even today, as the country has become a democracy with the guise of free information laws, it remains unclear how many inmates died on the prison island.

    "It was abused by prison authorities," Agbakoba said. "If you misbehave, they said we'll send you as punishment to" the island.

    In 1988, the wife of one inmate who discovered her husband had been sent there slipped a note to Nobel laureate Wole Soyinka. Soyinka was on the board of Agbakoba's Civil Liberties Organization, which later traveled to the island with a journalist from The Guardian newspaper who published a story exposing the prison. Authorities quickly closed the prison.

    •Sign up for the msnbc.com Photos Newsletter

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  • 1
    May
    2012
    10:08am, EDT

    Abandoned ships litter Nigeria coastline

    Sunday Alamba / AP

    The rusting hulk of an abandoned ship is beached on the coastline in Lagos, Nigeria. All photos taken March 15, 2012 and made available May 1, 2012.

    The Associated Press reports — The powerful waves of the Atlantic Ocean crash against rusting hulks beached along the coastline just outside of Nigeria's largest city, as lines of cargo ships waiting to come to port stretch across the western horizon.

    Government officials say they don't know how many abandoned ships choke Nigeria's waterways, but they cause tremendous environmental and navigational hazards. And as more wash ashore daily, the massive vessels cause fast-moving erosion along Nigeria's beaches that can tear away a kilometer of shoreline in a matter of days, experts say.

    Some of the ships have been there for decades, others only days. Many, abandoned after the lucrative theft of crude oil, serve as hulking metaphors for the lawlessness that plagues Nigeria. Read the full story.

    Previously on PhotoBlog: Extremes of wealth and poverty in the Nigerian oil industry

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    Sunday Alamba / AP

    Last August, Nigeria's Transport Minister Yusuf Suleiman promised to remove the wrecks within weeks, but nothing was done.

    Sunday Alamba / AP

    A man climbs out of the wreckage of an abandoned ship. Groups of salvagers move along the coast, removing whatever electronics and communication gear remains inside.

     

    3 comments

    One solution may be to attract the attention of large scrap mataling companies, perhaps they would be intrested in setting up some kind of deal with Nigeria to dismantel and haul away these deteriorating ships, it could perhaps provide jobs and money to the country for a temporary period of time and …

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    Explore related topics: nigeria, africa, environment, ship, world-news
  • 26
    Apr
    2012
    9:20am, EDT

    At least four killed as two bombs hit Nigeria newspaper offices

    /

    A car destroyed by the bomb sits outside the premises of ThisDay Newspapers bombed in Abuja on Thursday.

    By Reuters

    Suicide car bombers targeted the offices of Nigerian newspaper This Day in the capital Abuja and northern city of Kaduna on Thursday, killing at least four people in apparently coordinated strikes.

    This Day is based in southern Nigeria and is broadly supportive of President Goodluck Jonathan's government - the main target for Islamist insurgent group Boko Haram, which has killed hundreds of people this year in shootings and bombings.

    There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attacks.


    At around 11 a.m. one bomber drove a jeep into the daily's office in Abuja, killing himself and two others, witnesses and the state security service (SSS) said.

    At the same time, 90 miles north in Kaduna, a car was stopped from getting into This Day's offices and one of the attackers jumped out.

    Pius Utomi Ekpei/AFP – Getty Images

    A policeman stands in front of the premises of ThisDay newspapers bombed by suicide bombers early in Abuja on Thursday.

    "He was immediately challenged by two gallant Nigerians, following which he threw the bomb at them and it detonated, killing them instantly," the SSS said in a statement.

    It identified the bomber as Umaru Mustapha, from Maiduguri in Borno state, the home of Boko Haram in the remote northeast of Africa's most populous nation.

    Thousands of Nigerians protest fuel prices, as government fears 'anarchy'

    Later in the day, authorities reported another explosion in Kaduna. There were no further details.

    Boko Haram, whose name in the Hausa language means "Western education is sinful", has not previously targeted the press in its bombings. Last October, the sect killed a reporter for state-run television who it said was an informant.

    Pius Utomi Ekpei/AFP – Getty Images

    Police officers scan debris of the engine of the Jeep used to bomb newspaper offices in Abuja, Thursday.

    Boko Haram has been fighting a low level insurgency for more than two years and has become the main security menace in Africa's top oil producer. Most attacks have been in the largely Muslim north, well away from the southern oil fields.

    This Day angered Muslims a decade ago when one of its columnists suggested the Prophet Mohammad might have wanted to marry a beauty queen. At least 100 people were killed in ensuing riots.

    "Horrendous and wicked"
    President Jonathan, in Ivory Coast for talks with other West African leaders on a crisis in Mali, said in a statement the attacks on This Day were "misguided, horrendous and wicked."

    "The President urged media practitioners not to be dissuaded from carrying out their fearless campaign for peace, justice and equity, as democracy cannot flourish without press freedom," the statement from his media adviser said.

    At least 27 lay dead at a Christian church in Nigeria after a bombing there that was part of a wave of blasts across the country  on Christmas Day. An Islamist group claimed credit. NBC's Rohit Kachroo reports.

    In August last year, Boko Haram carried out a suicide car bombing at the United Nations building in Abuja that killed 25 people and prompted a ramp-up in security measures.

    At the scene of the Abuja blast on Thursday, sirens wailed as police and fire fighters rushed in. Smoke billowed from the building, whose windows were all smashed.

    Soldiers and police cordoned off the area, while emergency workers evacuated wounded on stretchers to waiting ambulances.

    "The suicide bomber came in a jeep and rammed a vehicle into the gate," said Olusegun Adeniyi, chairman of the This Day editorial board. "Two of our security men died, and obviously the suicide bomber died too."

    This Day's publisher, Nduka Obaigbena, is a celebrity in Nigeria and puts on music, art and fashion events in cities in around the world.

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Israeli military chief: I doubt Iran's 'rational' leadership will make nuclear bomb
    • Son of sacked Chinese official fights back
    • Indian baby bride wins landmark annulment
    • Missing girl Madeleine McCann may be 'still alive', UK police say
    • US and Philippines downplay China fears while staging 'routine' war games
    • 3 arrested as Germany cracks down on neo-Nazi extremists
    • Rupert Murdoch grilled at UK phone-hacking inquiry
    • Norwegians to protest mass killer Breivik, singing song he hates

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

     

    11 comments

    Nigeria.. the shining star of the Dark Continent...! Africa's leading oil producer.. median age of 20 years.. life expectancy of 52 years.. rampant corruption.. AIDS totally out of control.. However.. As unlikely as it would seem.. President Jonathan seems to be moving the country forward and out of …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: nigeria, terrorism, bomb, africa, featured, sectarianism, abuja, boko-haram
  • 9
    Apr
    2012
    5:00pm, EDT

    Annual carnival marks the end of Easter celebrations in Lagos

    Akintunde Akinleye / Reuters

    Participants attend a street carnival at Tafawa Balewa Square in Nigeria's commercial capital of Lagos. The annual carnival marks the end of Easter celebrations in this African country.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    •Sign up for the msnbc.com Photos Newsletter

    Comment

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  • 14
    Mar
    2012
    4:35pm, EDT

    Large abandoned ships rust on Nigerian beach

    Jon Gambrell / AP

    A man sits near an abandoned ship that lays beached near Takwa Bay just off the coast of Lagos, Nigeria on Wednesday. Abandoned ships are an environmental threat to the area as the wrecks of various large rusting hulks litter the coastline of Nigeria, without the funds or incentive to clean-up the strand.

    Jon Gambrell / AP

    A group of people walk along the corniche area toward abandoned ships that lay beached near Takwa Bay just off the coast of Lagos, Nigeria.

    Jon Gambrell / AP

    Men stand by an abandoned ship that lays beached near Takwa Bay.

    See more images from Nigeria in PhotoBlog.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    1 comment

    Holly ship ....

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