Author: The Nation

  • Kwara promotes 1,600 civil servants

    Kwara promotes 1,600 civil servants

    Our Reporter

     

    KWARA State Civil Service Commission has promoted more than 1,600 civil servants, who passed the 2019 promotion examination and oral interview.

    Commission Chairperson Habeebat Yusuf, in a statement in Ilorin to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), said the officers were from ministries, departments and agencies (MDAs) and were from Grade Level 07 to 17.

    Yusuf said the personnel were evaluated, using the new Performance Management System.

    She expressed the commission’s appreciation to Governor AbdulRahman AbdulRazaq for approving the promotion.

     

     

  • Police parade 82 kidnap suspects, others

    Police parade 82 kidnap suspects, others

    AbdulGafar Alabelewe, Kaduna

     

    KADUNA State Police Command on Thusday paraded over 82 suspects for crimes such as banditry, robbery, kidnapping, culpable homicide, rape, shop breaking, theft and others.

    Parading the suspects at the headquarters of the command after decorating newly- promoted officers with their new ranks, Police Commissioner Umar Muri said investigations into allegations were on, adding that some of the suspects have confessed to their crimes and will be arraigned.

    Items recovered from the suspects include three AK47 rifles, one beretta pistol with breach NO.98-0-006215, two locally-made revolver rifles, one locally-made single barrel gun, one locally-made pistol, five locally-made double barrel pistols, 50 rounds of 7.62mm AK47 live ammunition, 25 rounds of .9mm live ammunition, seven 7.62mm expended shells.

    Read Also: Policemen ‘assault’ woman

    Others are nine pump-action cartridges, five diggers. 12 long knives, 24 big sticks, Toyota RAV 4 vehicle, five motorcycles of different brands, six phones, one Samsung plasma television “32” inches, sum of N32,650.00, fake $400,000, one piece of fake 100Euro, 20,000 fake France sefa, fake N305,000:00), charms, a wallet, poisonous Gas 2GS-90 dashboard polish container.

    Also recovered are 14 rustled cows, 45 bags of guinea corn, 30 bags of dried leaves suspected to be Indian hemp, a small black bag and two sets of bed sheet.

     

  • El-Rufai demolishes building housing sex party

    El-Rufai demolishes building housing sex party

     AbdulGafar Alabelewe, Kaduna

     

    KADUNA State Governor Nasir El-Rufai has ordered the demolition of the building housing the venue of the botched sex party.

    Officials of the State Urban Planing Development Agency (KASUPDA) carried out the demolition on Thursday.

    Speaking about the development, spokesman for the agency Nuhu Garba said the building located at Sabon Tasha on the outskirts of Kaduna metropolis was demolished based on the laws guiding the agency.

    Some of the organisers of the party are already cooling their feet in police custody.

    One of the organisers of the botched Kaduna sex party has confessed that he conceived the idea of the party, but that it was a mere joke between him and his friends.

    He said on Thursday that the party was not organised to cause nuisance in Kaduna State, as it was not supposed to go public, but a mere party among friends.

    According to the suspect, “Kaduna sex party started as a joke between me and my friends. It was not meant to go public, it was not meant to cause nuisance in public. It was just someone that felt that she was too brilliant that posted it on Twitter.

    “I never posted the party invite on Twitter. Yes, I initiated it. Yes, it started as a joke, I keep saying it. It was not meant to disturb the peace and security of Kaduna.

    “The whole thing was a joke. A friend made the flier that was posted on Twitter and put my number on it and we all laughed over it. But somebody sent to someone and to another person like that, until it got to Twitter.”

    Asked about his name, the suspect became furious and said: “Don’t ask for my name please. I don’t know what else you want me to say. I said it was a joke.”

    Police Commissioner Umar Muri, parading the suspect, said: “One very devastating and heart touching trend bedevilling the state is the unimaginable habit of the youth indulging in activities that are expressly criminalised by the extant laws of the state, particularly the Penal Code Law of Kaduna State.

    Read Also: El-Rufai sacks 23 Education Secretaries, GM SCDA

    “For instance, on December 27, about 2030hrs, based on credible information that some youths, in wanton violation of the existing COVID-19 regulations prohibiting assembly or gathering of individuals for social activities, among other activities, concluded plans to stage an elaborate party titled: ‘Kaduna Sex Party’, at Asher Land Joint Hotel, opposite Post Office Junction, S/Tasha, Kaduna.

    “On receipt of this information, teams of Operation Yaki and policemen from S/Tasha Division swung into action and arrested the following suspects:

    Abraham Albera, male, owner of the hotel; Umar Rufai, male, of 27, Calabar Street/Katsina Road, Kaduna; and

    Suleiman Lemona, male, of Ajiya Street, S/Tasha, Kaduna.

    “Upon interrogation, the suspects confessed to have participated in organising the event. Information has it that the principal organiser is at large.

    “The musical instruments brought for the event were recovered. Suspects are under investigation and will be arraigned soon.”

     

     

  • WHO seeks better surveillance of new virus variants in Africa

    WHO seeks better surveillance of new virus variants in Africa

    Our Reporter

     

    THE World Health Organisation (WHO) has urged African countries to boost genomic surveillance and analysis as new COVID-19 variants emerge in the region, according to an announcement on the WHO Regional Office for Africa website.

    It stated that with the recent emergence in the region of new COVID-19 variants, which appear to have higher transmissibility, WHO is urging countries to undertake increased surveillance and analysis.

    “WHO calls on countries to boost surveillance and analysis through the African genome sequencing laboratory network, to detect any new mutations and strengthen the efforts to curb the pandemic.

    “South Africa recently detected a new SARS-CoV-2 variant, which appears to transmit more easily and is likely linked to the ongoing surge of COVID-19 infections in the country.

    “Further analysis is underway to determine the full epidemiological significance of this mutation. Nigeria is also carrying out more investigations on a variant identified in samples collected in August and October.’’

    The statement quoted Dr Matshidiso Moeti, WHO Regional Director for Africa, as saying, “the emergence of new COVID-19 variants is common. However, those with higher speed of transmission or potentially increased pathogenicity are of great concern.

    Read Also: 10 Nigerian celebrities who are single parents

    “Crucial investigations are underway to comprehensively understand the behaviour of the new mutant virus and steer response accordingly.’’

    In September 2020, WHO and the Africa Centre for Disease Control and Prevention launched a network of 12 laboratories in Africa, to reinforce genome sequencing of the SARS-CoV-2.  As at Dec. 23, 2020, 4,948 sequences had been produced in the region, representing just two per cent of the 295, 101 sequences done so far worldwide.

    According to the statement, South Africa, which has carried out most of the 4,948 sequences, has identified 35 SARS-CoV-2 lineages, and Nigeria 18.

    “Grouping viruses from different countries into the same lineage or sub-lineage shows linkage or importation of viruses between countries.”

     

  • UK to feed 430,000 Nigerians with £7m

    UK to feed 430,000 Nigerians with £7m

     Bola Olajuwon

     

    THE United Kingdom (UK) has pledged to spend £7 million aid in Nigeria through the World Food Programme to reach 430,000 Nigerians, especially in the Northeast, with unconditional food assistance and nutrition support for 108 days.

    The amount is part of an extra £47 million aid to immediately provide food, nutrition, water and shelter for vulnerable families in nine countries and regions.

    A statement issued by Press & Public Affairs Officer, British Deputy High Commission, Lagos Ndidiamaka Eze indicated that the number of people in need of humanitarian assistance in Northeast is increasing, having risen to 8.9 million people as the world enter 2021.

    The statement said over 3.4 million are living in acute food insecurity at crisis or worse levels in Northeast Nigeria, including 1.2 million living in areas that are inaccessible areas due to insecurity.

    This, it said, is set to increase to five million people in the next lean season (June–August 2021), if immediate mitigating actions are not taken.

    The UK is the second-largest humanitarian donor to Nigeria, providing £85 million in life-saving assistance in the financial year 2020/21 alone, as part of an overall £258 million of UK development funding in Nigeria. However, the UN Humanitarian Response Plan remains significantly underfunded and access remains a major obstacle.

    The UK, the statement added, is also lobbying international donors to provide more funding and calling for all conflict parties to allow safe, sustained, and unhindered humanitarian access to all people in need of assistance; including 1.24m people the UN estimate are living in areas currently inaccessible to humanitarian actors due to insecurity in the Northeast.

    Compounded by the coronavirus pandemic, humanitarian crises are getting worse, according to UN data published earlier this month, with 235 million people expected to be in need of urgent assistance in 2021 compared to 175 million people at the start of 2020.

    Read Also: Stinking temple

    Life-saving food, nutrition, water, childhood vaccinations and shelter are all urgently needed to help families in some of the largest humanitarian crises around the world.

    The UK Special Envoy for Humanitarian Affairs, Nick Dyer, visited Nigeria in November to urge the government, the UN and the international community for increased collective action to mitigate the deteriorating food insecurity, and to address humanitarian access and protection of civilians concerns.

    In September, at the launch of the new Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office (FCDO) the Foreign Secretary, Dominic Raab announced an international Call to Action to tackle food insecurity, including a new £119 million aid package to combat the global threat of coronavirus and food insecurity of which £8 million was dedicated to averting any further deterioration in food security in the North East region of Nigeria.

    At the same time, the Foreign Secretary also appointed Nick Dyer as the UK Special Envoy on Humanitarian Affairs to drive the UK’s international Call to Action to tackle food insecurity and help deliver on our vision of a Global Britain as a force for good around the world.

     

     

  • Lagos CP orders enforcement of protocols

    Lagos CP orders enforcement of protocols

    Our Reporter

     

    LAGOS State Commissioner of Police Hakeem Odumosu has ordered Area Commanders and Divisional Police Officers (DPOs) to enforce COVID-19 protocols as highlighted by the Presidential Taskforce and Lagos State Government.

    Odumosu gave this order in a statement issued on Thursday by the state Police Public Relations Officer, SP Olumuyiwa Adejobi.

    The commissioner said officers must enforce the use of face masks regularly at public places like markets and malls as well as ensure that social distancing was adhered to.

    “Also, the total closure of night clubs, bars, lounges, event centres, social party and street carnivals must be discouraged.

    “The use of infra-red thermometers to check body temperature, sanitisers and enforcement of the imposed curfew between 12 midnight and 4:00 a.m must be strictly adhered to,” he said.

    Read Also: Lagos CP warns against receipt of looted, stolen items

    Odumosu ordered Area Commanders and DPOs to also ensure the enforcement of the protocols in their various commands and stations across the state.

    “COVID-19 is real and we must do everything possible within our reach to halt its spread,” he said.

    The commissioner warned Area Commanders and DPOs to adequately supervise their men for effective service delivery and kick against incivility, misconduct and indiscipline among the officers.

    “Drunkenness, excessive or misuse of power, accidental discharge, extortion and other inappropriate behaviours as such, will not be tolerated in any way.

    “Anyone found wanting will be heavily sanctioned within the ambit of the law,” he said.

    Odumosu urged the public to be law-abiding, support security agencies for effective policing of the state and stay safe at all times, wishing everyone a Happy New Year ahead.

     

  • APC to hold National Convention in June as registration begins in two weeks

    APC to hold National Convention in June as registration begins in two weeks

     Jide Orintunsin, Abuja

     

    BARRING last minute change, the National Convention of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) will hold on or before June 30, it was learnt on Thursday.

    The party’s membership registration and re-validation will begin in two weeks.

    This was contained in a joint New Year message by the party’s Caretaker/Extra-Ordinary Convention Planning Committee (CECPC) Chairman and Yobe State Governor Mai Mala Buni and CECPC Secretary, Senator James John Akpanudoedehe, in Abuja.

    The statement, titled: Rebuilding our Party for a Stronger Democracy, said the reconstitution of the party’s leadership at all levels will begin immediately after the registration.

    The Caretaker Committee said it will engage some competent party leaders to actualize the various programmes.

    It also promised to release a detailed timetable of activities leading to the national convention.

    The statement reads: “Our party’s membership registration/revalidation will be followed by activities for the party’s leadership reconstitution at all levels, from ward, local government, states to national. Ahead of all that, the Caretaker Committee will release a detailed timetable for all activities very soon. And ahead of the congresses and National Convention, competent party leaders will be invited to serve in Committees to ensure that the mandate of NEC is achieved before June 30, 2021.”

    Read Also: ‘APC didn’t approach Ikpeazu to join party’

    The party’s leadership assured members that APC would be returned to members, as envisioned by its founding fathers.

    “As a party, we want to assure all our members that our commitment to lead the process of political change in Nigeria is unwavering. Our ability to constantly strengthen the structures of our party is part of our change credentials.

    “Other important requirements, which will include the review of our rules and other operational requirements, which are needed to make our party and our elected representatives more accountable to Nigerians, will be considered and all the necessary steps required will be taken.

    “A democracy is as strong as the political parties it produces. We are rebuilding our party, APC, to strengthen our democracy.”

    The party congratulated all Nigerians for the commencement of a new year, despite all the challenges encountered in 2020, especially the dreaded novel global COVID-19, which nearly ran nations of the world aground.

    It expressed confidence that the Federal Government, under President Muhammadu Buhari, will take necessary measures to return Nigeria to pre-COVID-19 normal conditions.

  • Ogun PDP Chairman Ogundele to lead Southwest PDP chairmen

    Ogun PDP Chairman Ogundele to lead Southwest PDP chairmen

    Our Reporter

     

    Ogun State  People’s Democratic Party (PDP) Chairman  Dr Sikirulai Ogundele, has emerged  the chairman of the  PDP chairmen in the six States of the South-West zone.

    Ogundele was announced to lead the  chairmen  after a meeting of the Zonal Caretaker Committee and  chairmen held in Abeokuta..

    Apart from seven members of the Zonal Caretaker Committee,  chairmen of Lagos, Ogun, Osun and Ekiti States, Adedeji Doherty, Ogundele, Hon.  Sunday Bisi and Chief Bisi Kolawole  attended the meeting.

    A statement , by the South-West Zonal Director of Media and Publicity of the PDP, Lere Olayinka, said Dr Ogundele was made the chairman of the chairmen based on his proven records of commitment to the party.

    He said the position of the chairman of chairmen was to ensure proper coordination, as the zone will be able to present a common front on national issues.

    Read Also: Ogun PDP: A divided house

    Ogundele was a member of the Ogun State House of Assembly between 1999 and 2007. He was also chairman of Ifo Local Government Area of Ogun State. He has also sought  the ticket of the PDP to contest the governorship in Ogun State twice.

    In his reaction, Dr Ogundele thanked his colleagues for the honour, privilege and trust reposed in him,  promising to be a team player and assuring all stakeholders of purposeful leadership.

    He said he will ensure supremacy of the party over and above any individual or group, adding that he will use his position to project the party positively and make sure that no one will be allowed to undermine the party.

     

  • Southwest PDP appoints Olayinka as spokesperson

    Southwest PDP appoints Olayinka as spokesperson

    Our Reporter

     

    The People’s Democratic Party (PDP) in the Southwest has formalised the appointment of Lere Olayinka, Media Aide to former Governor of Ekiti State,  Ayo Fayose,  as its Director of Media and Publicity.

    This was contained in a letter of appointed signed by the party’s  Zonal Secretary  Daisi Akintan,

    The letter dated December 14, 2020, a copy of the letter  reads: “On behalf of the South-West Zonal Caretaker Committee of our great party,  the PDP,  I write to inform you of your appointment as the Director of Media and Publicity of the party in the zone.

    “This is in our bid for the party to have effective and vibrant media and publicity in the South West zone.

    Read Also: PDP slams FG for dismissing failed state warning

    “This appointment is in recognition of your professionalism and commitment to the party as well as immense contribution to the party in the area of media and publicity.

    “It is expected that you will bring your exemplary professional performance to bear in this important assignment.”

    ‘’In 2016, Olayinka was on the verge of emerging as the National Publicity Secretary of the PDP at the party’s National Convention in Port Harcourt when the convention was put on hold due to litigation.

    ‘’He could not contest the position at the December 2017 National Convention as the position was zoned to the North Central.’’

  • Merchants of disease

    Merchants of disease

    Olatunji Ololade

     

    THE coronavirus is real. News of a second wave of the pandemic sweeps through nations as you read, spooling a global contagion of fear. Despair is what is left when humanity mutates to viral nature and nations submit to disease.

    We are lucky to have survived the first scourge of the coronavirus aka COVID-19 but who would be left after the plague is done with Nigeria?

    Who would be left after the country’s ravage by her innate plague, the raptorial ruling class? Between the pandemic and the plague of corrupt leadership, whose voices and whose breath would rattle as the dry bones they picked over?

    As the “second wave” seizes the nation, you can’t but wonder what is true and what isn’t true. It becomes more difficult to separate the truth from the lies, reality from empurpled fact.

    Of course, COVID-19 is real but if the government claims to have spent over N30 billion in fighting the pandemic in four months, it’s their word against our fears.

    The Federal Government disclosed that it “spent N30,540,563,571.09, representing 84% of the N36.3 billion public funds and donations received to respond to COVID-19 between April 1, 2020, and July 31, 2020.”

    To avoid severe and persistent migraines, you learn to ignore the details of the spending. There is no gainsaying public officers and civil servants made a killing from the first wave of COVID-19 palliative funding.

    In the wake of a “second wave,” their excitement is palpable and visibly etched in their faces and embellished ‘truths’ about the magnitude and consequences of the pandemic.

    Very soon, they will institute another lockdown – deservedly perhaps given the citizenry’s disregard of hygiene and preventive measures.

    President Muhammadu Buhari has reiterated the need for discipline and containment thus setting the tone for another confinement.

    The lockdown symphony sounds another dirge of intricate threat and appeal: government will warn hungry citizenry to stay at home, claiming the imperative of fighting COVID-19 trumps every other consideration. The intent could hardly be faulted.

    But the masses will protest; the lockdown will be flouted across state lines and status circuits. The consequences will be worse in public offices, where governors contract the real virus or pseudo-COVID-19, and attain specious recovery in a record three days, two days, and a day perhaps.

    At the likelihood of another lockdown, Nigerians cringe in dread of forced restraint, job losses, heartbreaks, emotional trauma, and government looting of public coffers.

    Still, nothing in Mr. President and the 36 state governors’ babble hint at a solution or purposive steps at finding a cure or collaboration with a more visionary partner to create one. That’s flawed leadership and worthy of rebuke.

    The government depends on its affiliation with the Global Vaccine Alliance Initiative (Gavi) for access to vaccines. Health Minister, Osagie Ehanire, said the government has also registered for COVID-19 vaccines with the Global Access Program (COVAX) co-led by the World Health Organization (WHO).

    Of course, this government like previous administrations has neither the vision nor initiative required to exit Nigeria from the league of global parasites cum spectators to the extraordinary league of global superpowers and doers.

    Before the pandemic, Nigeria’s ministries of health, science, and technology had no strategic plans to add value to the country’s development. The status quo will persist till 2023. They can’t give what they do not have.

    Health Minister Ehanire enthused about a committee set up to select the vaccine most suitable for the country against the virus. He is excited about getting 20 million doses of the COVID-19 vaccine “at some cost” no doubt. His counterpart Ogbonnaya Onu, who presides over the ministry of science and technology must be psyched up too.

    Ehanire and Onu must be ashamed that they both preside over dead ministries incapable of fostering the brilliance and enterprise required to produce a vaccine at the homefront, for the benefit of Nigerians and the rest of the world.

    Perhaps the government should hand over both ministries to Chinese, American, or European scientists rather than afflict Nigerians with dormant health and science-tech ministries.

    As the pandemic persists, the fabric of life is spun and torn by the talons of Nigeria’s vulturine leadership. Somewhere between their pretensions at curtailing the pandemic, a tragic lyre amplifies the horror of our rising funeral pyre. Their pleas and threats are crafty and fickle thus re-establishing their roles as misery merchants, malefic dealers, and undertakers.

    To alleviate hardships imposed on impoverished and most vulnerable segments of the citizenry, federal and state governments will make another comic show of distributing food and money. In determining the vulnerable, they will resort to ill-informed and arbitrary categorizations thus rendering large segments of the citizenry disgruntled and hopeless.

    The over-hyped palliatives will resound the parable of the sower in the sewer. In performing the roles for which they were elected and for which they claim outrageous compensations, public officers will demand a ceremony of appreciation and re-investiture, come 2023. It’s a classic tale of leaders as dealers: steamrollers masquerading as hope-runners.

    The greatest virus is Nigeria’s leadership, many of whom have learned to feign compassion that they do not feel. It is an open secret that the reigning oligarchs are committed to the anti-COVID-19 campaign because the storms stirred by the virus tears at their gated paradise.

    In the race for solutions to the pandemic, Senegal developed a test kit at $1 each. Even more amazing is the fact that these test kits could have results ready within 10 minutes, in an easily readable format; probably something like the line that appears in a pregnancy test kit.

    At the backdrop of Senegal’s initiative, Madagascar flaunted a herbal cure named COVID-Organics. Despite condemnations and disclaimers of the country’s traditional cure, the government showed sterling initiative and resolve, unlike the Nigerian leadership, who waited for a vaccine from “colonial overlords” while obsessing about rising figures of the infected, the deceased, and cured.

    The country’s leadership has, so far, re-established its perverse fetish for control and refinements of domination amid fears that public officers may be exploiting the pandemic to steal public funds.

    At this juncture, it is pertinent to ask: To what end are the millions of naira committed to health funding and scientific research? How valuable is the role and establishment of the Nigerian Institute of Medical Research (NIMR)? How proactive is the institute in networking with sister institutes on the African continent, to conduct ground-breaking studies and find a cure to Africa’s most pressing health challenges?

    A corrupt political class, a dysfunctional health system, and a disillusioned citizenry aggravate Nigeria’s anti-COVID-19 campaign.

    The crisis demanded a swift, lucid, response but the government reacted with institutionalised lethargy and pitilessness; cruelly leaving the borders open like a leadership deadened to the finer aspects of tact, vision and reason.

    As we go into 2021, the unfolding dystopia demands urgent intervention by well-meaning Nigerians and civil societies in the interest of the collective. The presiding oligarchs lack the brilliance, native intelligence, and wisdom to curtail the spread of COVID-19.

    They lack the foresight required to drive Nigeria up the path of progress and rebirth. The search for their replacement, come 2023, must begin in earnest.