Author: The Nation

  • U.S doctor ‘guilty’ of murders

    A Philadelphia doctor has been convicted of the first-degree murders of three babies delivered and killed with scissors in late-term abortions, BBC reports.

    Dr. Kermit Gosnell, 72, was acquitted on another charge of killing a fourth baby, who let out a whimper before he cut its neck, prosecutors said.

    He was also found guilty of involuntary manslaughter of an adult patient who died of an overdose.

    The case was seized on by both sides in the United States debate over abortion.

    Prosecutors are seeking the death penalty for Gosnell.

    He performed thousands of abortions over a career spanning three decades. Officials said his medical practice earned him about $1.8m (£1.1m) a year.

    Former staff members of the clinic testified that he had routinely performed illegal late-term abortions past Pennsylvania’s 24-week limit.

  • Nasarawa killings: Insurgents may overrun Nigeria – Mark

    Senate President, David Mark, yesterday took stock of the unabating insecurity in the country and declared that insurgents may overrun the country.

    Mark who spoke at the weekend, according to a statement by his Chief Press Secretary, Paul Mumeh in Abuja, warned that unless immediate steps were taken to arrest the worsening situation, the country may fall prey to insurgents.

    He said the challenges facing the nation calls for soul searching between and among Nigerians  in order to work out a permanent solution to the crisis.

    The situation, he noted, has degenerated to an intolerable level and exposes everybody to danger saying that the continued loss of lives and properties cannot be a way of life.

    He said the  development has become a matter of grave concern saying that unless everybody come together and resolve to tackle the security problem headlong, the perpetrators may overrun the country.

    He condemned in strong terms the attack and killing of police and other security operatives in Nasarawa state by some cultists and submitted that “nobody, no nation no matter how weak would live to accept such  heinous crime”.

    An angry Senator Mark wondered, “What is happening to us as a people is strange and condemnable. How did we degenerate to this level where every one became a brothers’ hater instead of being our brothers’ keeper?

    “The situation calls for soul searching. We must re-examine ourselves. We must look inwards.”

    He noted that there could be foreign collaborators but the foreigners would not succeed if there are no willing tools internally.

    The President of the Senate implored any aggrieved persons or groups to explore many established channels including the National Assembly to seek redress instead of resorting to violence.

    He lamented that the insecurity situation has made life uncomfortable for Nigerians and reduced sacred human life to something insignificant.

    While sympathizing with the victims of various attacks in Borno, Yobe, Nasarawa and Benue States, the Senate President urged security operatives to go back to the drawing board and restrategize for effective operation.

    He also suggested a working synergy between and among security agencies, saying that such cooperation would plug any loophole or lapses and ultimately yield better result.

    This, he added has become imperative in order to fish out the perpetrators of these crimes,stressing that culprits must be brought to book.

    Mark said: “We must remove sentiments and be able to separate issues from crimes or criminalities. Offenders must be seen to be punished to serve as a deterrent to others.”

    He stated that the siege Nigerians have been subjected to on account of the insurgencies and other violent crimes in the recent times are avoidable if “we put our houses in order.”

    “Everyone,” he pointed out, “must rise up to defend our fatherland instead of leaving security in the hands of security operatives alone.”

  • FG yet to decide on state of emergency rule, says Presidency

    The Federal Government at the weekend declared that it has not decided on declaring state of emergency rule in the five Northern states facing fresh security challenges.

    Many security personnel and civilians were recently killed in fresh security crises in Borno, Benue, Nasarawa, Yobe and Plateau States.

    The Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, Dr Reuben Abati, in an interview at the weekend said the clarification has become necessary due to the wide  media speculations adding  that the reports do not reflect government’s thinking at the moment.

    According to him, the Federal Government is still studying situations in the affected states.

    He said:  “No such decision has been taken and people should stop speculating. The federal government is studying the situations in the affected states.”

    “And it would take a decision that would be in the overall interest of the security of not just the people of the states affected by the country”. He added

    After the National Security Council meeting on Friday to review the security situation in Nassarawa, Benue and Borno states where more than fifty security personnel and civilians were killed by gunmen, there were speculations in the media that the federal government would declare state of emergency to deal with the challenge.

  • Al-Makura promises hell for troublemakers

    Nasarawa State Governor Tanko Al Makura has said that those fanning the embers of violence in the state will not go unpunished.

    The governor gave the assurance in a statement issued on Sunday  in reaction to the killing of 30 policemen at Alakyo village by the Ombatse militia.

    “The state government will not watch while some disgruntled individuals hold it to ransom and turn the state into theatre of death, undermining the development efforts of this administration,’’ he said

    The statement, signed by Malam Sani Mairiga, his Senior Special Assistant on Media and Press Affairs, quoted the governor as saying: “The state government will deal decisively with those fanning the embers of crisis in the state, including their sponsors.

    “We have had enough bloodshed in Nasarawa, those who are hell-bent on sabotaging our efforts will not go unpunished.

    “It is unfortunate that some people still perpetrate evil against their fellow human beings at a time when the state has begun to count the gains of democracy.

    “The crisis has no religious correlation  as been speculated by some section of the media; some people are just bent on destroying the state because they feel they are not in power.’’

    The governor said in the statement that some politicians were behind the crisis being witnessed in some parts of the state, adding: “They should know that nemesis will soon catch up with them.

    “There is no hiding place for unpatriotic individuals in Nasarawa; there is no cause that can justify the killing of innocent souls. ”

    The governor called on citizens of the state, regardless of their religion or ethnicity, to be good, kind and supportive of one another “in this difficult period’’.

    He warned that the government would no longer condone any act of lawlessness, adding that it would not relent in its efforts to fish out those behind the killings and the source of the sophisticated weapons they (militia) used to unleash the attack.

  • Polio: Fighting  a tough battle

    Polio: Fighting a tough battle

    As preparations begin for the next sub-national Immunisation Plus’ Days (IPDs) using bivalent oral polio vaccine, Oyeyemi Gbenga-Mustapha takes a look at why the vaccine preventable polio is still endemic in Nigeria.

    Nigeria is one of the three countries that is still polio-endemic, it is in this unenviable company with Afghanistan and Pakistan. Of all the three, Nigeria is the reservoir of wild polio virus, it is the only country with ongoing transmission of all three serotypes- wild poliovirus type 1, wild poliovirus type 3 and circulating vaccine- desired polio type 2. The Northern states are the main source of polio infections.

    In 2009, operational improvements in these northern states led to a 90 per cent decline in cases of wild poliovirus type 1 and a 50 per cent decline in overall cases compared with 2008.

    As of last week, Polio Global Eradication Initiative, a monitoring organisation of polio situation in Nigeria, reported that two new cases of wild polio virus 1 have been found in Kano and Taraba states, bringing the total number of wild polio cases for this year to 18. The case from Kano is the most recent case in the country.

    According to medical experts, as long as a single child remains infected, children in all countries are at risk of contracting polio. Failure to eradicate polio from these last remaining strongholds could result in as many as 200, 000 new cases every year within 10 years. Polio has no cure but can be prevented.

    In most countries, the global effort has expanded capacities to tackle other infectious diseases by building effective surveillance and immunization systems.

    A delicate balance

    Polio is a highly infectious disease caused by a virus. It invades the nervous system, and can cause total paralysis in a matter of hours. Initial symptoms are fever, fatigue, headache, vomiting, stiffness in the neck and pain in the limbs. According to the World Health Organisation (WHO), one in 200 infections lead to irreversible paralysis (usually in the legs). Among those paralysed, five per cent to 10 per cent die when their breathing muscles become immobilised.

    According to WHO, globally, Polio cases have decreased by over 99 per cent since 1988, from an estimated 350, 000 cases to 223 reported cases in 2012. The reduction is the result of the global effort to eradicate the disease.

    Nigeria is fighting to end the endemic. However, there are sundry factors militating against the actualisation of this hope.

    The polio eradication programme continue to miss too many children in key geographic areas and population groups due to a mixture of operational and social factors. In 2012, going by data supplied by Polio Global Eradication Initiative, 61 children were paralyzed by polio in the first half of 2012, as opposed to 24 at the same time in 2011. In 2011, more than 95 per cent of all cases occurred in the eight persistently endemic northern states of Borno, Jigawa, Kano, Katsina, Kebbi, Sokoto, Yobe and Zamfara.

    A formerly strong primary health care system in northern Nigeria has been weakened over many years due to incessant polio outbreaks and resistant of a segment of the populace over the safety of the vaccination. This has led to serious gap in the administration of the vaccine and subsequent disruption of campaigns as well as the killing of vaccinators. Now routine immunisation services are either no longer available or irregular; coupled with limited resources for health services and gaps in vaccine storage and distribution.

    According to a nongovernmental organisation, PATH, Northern Nigeria has one of the lowest rates of immunisation coverage in the world. In many parts of the north, barely 10 percent of children receive all of their routine vaccines. Coverage rates for the vaccine against tetanus among women are equally low.

    Misunderstood scheme

    The north is rife with misperception on the effects of the contents of the vaccine on health, especially reproduction. Campaigns have been on in the north that vaccination leads to reduction of productivity, this has been countered at all levels but the impact is still there.

    But in the face of sundry factors including insecurity, especially of Boko Haram, ridding the country of the polio virus can remain a mirage. Conflicts and insecurity do weaken public health systems.

    For instance, attacks on health workers in Kano State have robbed vulnerable populations of basic life-saving health interventions. In the face of these, Nigeria continues to pose a significant risk to surrounding countries. In 2011, polio viruses originating from Nigeria were detected in five countries on West and Central Africa. Despite dozens of vaccination campaigns over the past years, according to Polio Global Eradication Initiative, no more than 65 percent of children have received four or more Oral Polio Vaccine (OPV) doses in Borno, Kano, Sokoto and Yobe states.

    Viruses with genetic evidence of long periods of circulation without detection are still being found, indicating surveillance gaps. Sub national engagement of political leadership remains patchy. Future benefits of polio eradication are immense. Once polio is eradicated, the world can celebrate the delivery of a major global public good that will benefit all, no matter where they live. According to WHO, Economic modelling has found that the eradication of polio would save at least US$ 40 to 50 billion over the next 20 years, mostly in low-income countries. Most importantly, success will mean that no child will ever again suffer the terrible effects of lifelong polio-paralysis.

     

     

  • Woman commits suicide over ‘bedroom tax’

    A woman who committed suicide left a note blaming the Government’s so-called bedroom tax for her death, Sky News reports.

    Stephanie Bottrill, who killed herself earlier this month, wrote in her final letter: “I don’t [blame] anyone for my death expect [sic] the government.”

    Her son Steven, 27, said she was struggling to cope after being told to pay £20-a-week extra for two under-occupied bedrooms at her home in Solihull.

    He told the Sunday People: “I couldn’t believe it. She said not to blame ourselves, it was the Government and what they were doing that caused her to do it.

    “She was fine before this bedroom tax. It was dreamt up in London, by people living in offices and big houses. They have no idea the effect it has on people like my mum.”

    Ms Bottrill died 10 days ago. She was 53.

    In the days running up to her death she had told neighbours: “I can’t afford to live anymore.”

    Solihull Council Labour group leader, David Jamieson, who knows the family, said: “I’m absolutely appalled this poor lady has taken her own life because she was worried how she would pay the bedroom tax.

     

  • Mikel fit for Europa League final

    Mikel fit for Europa League final

     

    Mikel Obi said he has regained full fitness from hip injury ahead of Wednesday’s Europa League final.

    Last season’s UEFA Champions League winners Chelsea face Portuguese giants Benfica on Wednesday night in this season’s Europa League final at the Amsterdam Arena.

    “It is not always good feeling when one is out of action but I am good now. I returned to full training on Friday,” Mikel informed MTNFootball.com

    “I am set for Europa league final and I am looking forward to it as well as the last game of the season.”

    Mikel last featured for Chelsea in a 2-0 win over Swansea on April 28.

    Meanwhile, Victor Moses passed a late fitness test to start for Chelsea in the all-important clash with Aston Villa on Saturday, which ended 2-1 at Villa Park in favour of Chelsea courtesy of a Frank Lampard brace.

    Moses had picked up a knock in a 2-2 draw at home with London rivals Tottenham Hotspur.

     

  • China blast kills 27 miners

    An explosion at a coal mine in China’s south-west Sichuan province has killed at least 27 people, state media reports.

    The blast happened in Taozigou coal mine in the city of Luzhou, Xinhua news agency said.

    More than 100 miners were working underground when the accident happened on Saturday afternoon, according to officials.

    Of 81 people rescued, 16 were injured. It was the second deadly coal mine explosion in China in 24 hours.

    On Friday, 12 miners were killed when gas from the Dashan mine in south-west Guizhou province exploded.

    Chinese coal mines, according to the BBC are notoriously dangerous despite officials efforts to improve safety standards.

    In April a coal mine gas explosion in the north-eastern Jilin province killed 18 miners and injured 12 others.

    More than 1,300 people were killed in mine accidents in 2012.

    Deaths and injuries are often blamed on a failure to follow safety procedures.

     

  • Chimpanzees mark 50th anniversary in Jos

    Two chimpanzees in Jos zoo, Paulina and Bobby, on Saturday celebrated their golden jubilee and 20 years of widowhood.

    Their husband, Peter, died 20 years ago at the zoo.

    Mr John Bernard, the Manager, Jos Zoological Garden, said the widows were born in 1963 at the zoo.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the ceremony received much attention as many people from the zoo, the Department of Zoology, University of Jos, some NGOs, and other members of the public witnessed it.

    Prof. Hayword Mafyuai, the Vice-Chancellor, University of Jos, made some monetary donation for  the upkeep of the apes and lauded the management of the garden for taking good care of them.

    Mafyuai called on other well meaning individuals to form a club to serve as a platform for the receipt of donations for the upkeep of animals in the zoo.

    He stressed the need for the zoo to partner with the university toward creating an even better environment for animals to live.

    Bernard, in his remarks, recalled that Bobby and Paulina had given birth to many children, who died.

    “As the duo hit 50, they need the assistance of everybody to reach the age of 60.

    “We live in a society that is slowly becoming ignorant of the importance attached to the conservation of animals; this is why this celebration is very necessary so as to send out a strong statement on the need to care for, protect and promote animals,’’ Benard said.

    He added: “We must also note that animals are an important aspects of our environment and we want to create the awareness that the zoological garden has always and will continue to embrace everyone who considered themselves friends of the zoo.’’

    He expressed regret that many animals had been converted into bush meat, and stressed the need to manage such animals to reach their ripe ages.

    He said that Bobby and Paulina were species of Chimpanzee mostly found around the Nigerian and Cameroonian border and expressed regret that the specie was gradually becoming extinct.

    The Commissioner of Tourism in Plateau,  Mr Joel Domtoe, commended the management of the zoo for taking good care of the animals to reach an advance age of 50.

    He urged staff of the organisation  to continue to take proper care of animals so that they could live much longer. (NAN)

  • Buhari warns of looming anarchy

    Buhari warns of looming anarchy

    Former Head of State and National Leader of the Congress for Progressive Change (CPC), General Muhammadu Buhari has warned of a looming anarchy in the country which is beyond the ability of the President Goodluck Jonathan led government to control.

    Buhari spoke in Abuja on Saturday at the party’s National Convention to merge with other top opposition parties including the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) and the All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP).

    “Anarchy is knocking on the door of many sections of this country and the Federal Government has not demonstrated that it has the good sense to understand what is going on, or the competence to check it.

    “The nation is hopelessly adrift. But, if we are to survive, this vicious circle of violence that has engulfed this nation must be brought to an end; and we implore the National Assembly to take the lead in this quest for peace,” Buhari noted.

    He said the patience of the nation and the various communities has been severely tried and stretched to its limits and urged well meaning Nigerians to explore every opportunity to save the country.

    Buhari emphasised that the only way to stabilize the country is for opposition parties to merge and oust the ruling PDP noting that all the parties joining to form All Progressives Congress (APC) are coming in as equals.

    The opposition parties, he said have resolved that henceforth all votes must be counted.

    “This is a historic moment when several different political parties have resolved to come together to change Nigeria for the better and stop the mindless drift that has been going on for the last fourteen years. We must understand and accept that we are here gathered to make history or forever stand accused and condemned by it.

    “The government has failed in almost everything. It has proved unable to secure the nation’s internal environment: there is widespread and rising poverty and unemployment across the length and breadth of the country. There is spiraling lawlessness all over the country. There is a complete and total decline in the quality of social services and an irremediable dilapidation in the nation’s socio-economic infrastructure across board,” Buhari said.