Author: The Nation

  • We want Yoruba Republic, Ilana Omoodua leaders insist

    We want Yoruba Republic, Ilana Omoodua leaders insist

    By Segun Showunmi, Ibadan

    The Youth Initiatives of Ilana Omoodua led by Prof. Banji Akintoye, has insisted on creation of a Yoruba Republic, saying agitation for restructuring of Nigeria is too late for Yoruba people.

    The coalition spoke on Saturday as barricaded Mapo Hall, Ibadan, Oyo State capital, the original venue the group planned to hold its self-determination rally.

    The movement, which has over 200 groups, home and abroad, speaking through its Secretary, Dr. Akin Adejumo, also said there won’t be an election in 2023.

    The Yoruba groups have been agitating for the Yoruba nation over the last few years, citing several challenges facing the country as the reason for the agitation.

    At the rally were representatives of Itsekiri in Delta State, Yoruba people in Edo and Kwara states, youths across the Southwest states and Yoruba leaders.

    Adejumo said the nation is not working and that there is a need for Nigerians to go back to the drawing board and make a profitable decision for their people.

    He said: It is only a lunatic that will be doing things in the same way and expect a different result. Yoruba people are not lunatics and that is why we want a better future for our children. Nigeria is not working.

    “If you are a student of history, you will agree with me that Nigeria is not working. It is the movement that said there won’t be an election in 2023 and not me. If you go round and ask our people, you will know that our people are not supporting the election in 2023.”

    Representing the Yoruba in Itsekiri land, Issac Ajatitan said the Yoruba people in the land are fully in support of Yoruba nation’s self- determination

    Another leader, Basorun Kunle Adesokan, described the movement as the solution to challenges facing the country.

    “We can no longer tolerate this undemocratic government again. Nigeria is not working and it won’t work. We want our Odu’a nation and we must achieve it,” he said.

    Another speaker, Kazeem Onigege, said the ultimatum given to the federal government has expired and the movement must do the needful.

    “As we speak, we are no more Nigerians. We have given them an ultimatum and it has expired. We are no more Nigerians. We are Oduduwa republic.”

  • Hansi Flick to leave Bayern Munich

    Hansi Flick to leave Bayern Munich

    Bayern Munich manager Hansi Flick has confirmed that he will seek to leave the club at the end of the season.

    The 56-year-old manager has been linked with the German national team post, which is likely to become available when Jogi Low leaves the position after Euro 2020.

    He was previously the assistant coach of the national team between 2006 and 2014.

    “The situation is I told the team today that I informed the club during the week that I wanted to get out of my contract at the end of the season,” Flick said to Sky television in Germany.

    Flick joined Bayern as assistant manager to Niko Kovac for the start of the 2019 season but was promoted to interim manager when Kovac left in November the same year.

    He was made permanent manager in April 2020 and went on to secure that season’s Bundesliga, DFB-Pokal and Champions League trophies, and secured the following season’s UEFA Super Cup and Club World Cup.

    His contract is set to run until 2023.

    Bayern are seven points clear at the top of the Bundesliga but were knocked out of the Champions League quarter-finals by Paris Saint-Germain last week.

  • Nwankwo smashes Serie A goal-scoring record

    Nwankwo smashes Serie A goal-scoring record

    Simeon Nwankwo continued his rich vein of form in front of goal when he smashed home his 16th goal in the Italian Serie A.

    ‘Simy’ tucked away a penalty in the 68th minute for Crotone to draw level with visitors Udinese.

    It was his seventh penalty goal of the season.

    However, Crotone again lost 2-1 and they remain rooted to the basement of the Italian top flight with a mere 15 points from 31 matches.

    A quick return to the Italian lower league looks likely for them after another round of matches.

  • BREAKING: Pantami renounces radical comments on terrorists

    BREAKING: Pantami renounces radical comments on terrorists

    By Alao Abiodun

    Minister of Communications and Digital Economy Isa Pantami has renounced his radical comments on terrorist groups including Taliban and Al-Qaeda.

    The Minister said he was young when he made the radical comments, adding he is mature and knows better.

    He spoke while answering questions during his daily Ramadan lecture at Annor Mosque in Abuja on Saturday.

    Daily Trust quoted him to have said: “For 15 years, I have moved round the country while educating people about the dangers of terrorism. I have traveled to Katsina, Gombe, Borno, Kano states and Difa in Niger Republic to preach against terrorism.

    Read Also: I don’t hate Christians or support terrorists – Pantami

    “I have engaged those with Boko Haram ideologies in different places. I have been writing pamphlets in Hausa, English and Arabic. I have managed to bring back several young persons who have derailed from the right path.

    “Some of the comments I made some years ago that are generating controversies now were based on my understanding of religious issues at the time, and I have changed several positions taken in the past based on new evidence and maturity.

    “I was young when I made some of the comments; I was in university, some of the comments were made when I was a teenager. I started preaching when I was 13, many scholars and individuals did not understand some of international events and therefore took some positions based on their understanding, some have come to change their positions later.”

    The embattled Pantami has been facing the heat over his alleged link with terrorist groups with many Nigerians calling on President Muhammadu Buhari to sack the minister.

    The Nigerian Twitter community also said it was risky to trust the Minister with data of Nigerians, especially with the ongoing National Identification Number and Subscriber Identity Module integration exercise under his watch.

  • Peter Utaka hits hat trick, Nwakali, Oparanozie on fire

    Peter Utaka hits hat trick, Nwakali, Oparanozie on fire

    Peter Utaka continued to defy age as the 37-year-old smashed home a hat-trick to lead Kyoto Sanga to a comprehensive 6-1 victory over Giravanz Kitakyushu in a Japanese League 2 clash on Saturday.

    Utaka scored the game’s first two goals before the half-hour mark and added a third early in the second half as Kyoto completely outclassed the visitors at the Sanga Stadium by Kyocera in Kameoka.

    The former Odense man is on course to enjoy another productive season with Kyoto, having now registered seven goals in eight games in the new campaign.

    Utaka banged in a career-high 22 goals in 40 matches last term.

    In Spain, Alcorcon eased their relegation worries after a Dani Ojeda brace and a Kelechi Nwakali penalty gave manager Juan Anquela’s men a 3-1 win at Lugo.

    It is Nwakali’s third strike in four matches for Alcorcon, with the 22-year-old midfielder also netting a brilliant winner in the 2-1 triumph over Castellon five days ago.

  • Prince Musaad resigns as Sheffield Utd chairman

    Prince Musaad resigns as Sheffield Utd chairman

    Sheffield United chairman, Prince Musaad Bin Khalid Al Saud, has resigned from his position.

    Prince Musaad became the Premier League’s youngest chairman in September 2019 when appointed by his father-in-law and club owner Prince Abdullah at the age of 26.

    He leaves his post with the Blades bottom of the Premier League table having collected only 14 points from 31 matches this season. They are 18 points adrift of safety.

    In a statement by the club, Prince Abdullah said: “On behalf of the board of directors, I offer our thanks to Prince Musaad for his efforts, he has made a valuable contribution to the development of the football club.”

  • Chelsea beat Man City to secure place in FA Cup final

    Chelsea beat Man City to secure place in FA Cup final

    Chelsea beat Manchester City 1-0 on Saturday to book a place in next month’s FA Cup final thanks to a second-half goal by Hakim Ziyech which ended City manager Pep Guardiola’s dream of steering his side to an unprecedented quadruple of titles.

    Ziyech scored in the 55th minute when he tapped into an empty net from a cross by Timo Werner with City goalkeeper Zack Steffen in no man’s land after racing off his line to close Werner down but then seeming to change his mind.

    Read Also: I ‘couldn’t care less’ about Pogba’s criticism – Mourinho

    The win at Wembley leaves Chelsea coach Thomas Tuchel on course for a trophy after engineering a remarkable turnaround since he replaced Frank Lampard in January, with the Blues also in the Champions League semi-finals against Real Madrid.

    Premier League leaders City’s woes were compounded by the loss of midfielder Kevin de Bruyne early in the second half with an apparent ankle injury ahead of a busy end to the season for City who have a Champions League semi-final against Paris St Germain and the League Cup Final against Tottenham Hotspur.

    Chelsea face Leicester City or Southampton, who play their semi-final on Sunday, in the FA Cup final on May 15. (Reuters)

  • Peruzzi: I don’t have a girlfriend

    Peruzzi: I don’t have a girlfriend

    By Gbenga Bada

    DMW music act, Tobechukwu Victor Okoh aka Perruzi has confessed to not having a lover or girlfriend.

    In a recent radio interview, Peruzzi said, “I don’t have a girlfriend at the moment.”

    The singer, however, admits to seeing a lot of ladies but does not have a girlfriend.

    Peruzzi, who is currently promoting his sophomore album, ‘Rum & Boogie,’ had cleared the air on his rumoured affair with Davido’s fiancee, Chioma Rowland, saying it’s crazy for anyone to think he had sex with her.

    Peruzzi, in a no holds barred chat with Chude Jideonwo on #WithChude, opened up saying, “Someone said I had sex with the wife of the man who helped me. Do you know how crazy that is?”

    The 31-year-old singer went further to say, “Even if you hate me, what did Davido do to you? So right now, I am careful of every pin that drops near me.”

    Perruzi admits to still getting shocked once in a while when absurd stories about him are shared on social media. He said the most absurd remains the false claim that he slept with Chioma.

     

  • Nigeria not a scam

    Nigeria not a scam

    By Fredrick Nwabufo

    SIR: It is the bounden duty of every citizen to hold the government to account. In fact, citizenship is a call to duty – for the state. And there is no compelling duty which supersedes citizens subjecting their employees – the government – to scrutiny and constant vigilance. Criticising the government is within the rights of every citizen, and active citizenship demands taking the government through its paces. No government is without criticism, and none is too special for criticism.

    However, we must distinguish between any government and Nigeria as a country. Governments will come and go, but Nigeria remains. We must understand Nigeria is its people. So, when we cast pejoratives at the country we are only slinging shots at ourselves. If we say, ‘’Nigeria is a scam’’, inadvertently we are implying, ‘’Nigerians are scammers’’.  Nigeria did not become a ‘’scam’’, as some of those reviling the nation say, by accident; it became whatever it is by the machination of all of us.

    Nigeria is not a ‘’mere geographical expression’’. Nigeria is its people. The good, the bad and the ugly – we made it so. Whatever is ailing the country we are a vector of the causative factors. If Nigeria is a scam – as alleged by Pastor Paul Adefarasin — then we are all scammers. Though I concede that Adefarasin’s outburst might have come from a place of patriotism, his cataloguing of Nigeria as a ‘’scam and fraud’’ falls short of tact and critical reasoning. If Nigeria is a fraud; then we are all fraudsters – leaders and followers alike. We all have contributed in no small measure to the discomfiture of the entity.

    We live in a country where pastors run their ministries like conglomerates. They run them like business enterprises — but have issues with CAMA; a law introduced by the government to regulate the business undertakings of religious bodies and to bring some transparency and accountability into them.  Yet, these same people who do not want to live by the law are the loudest voices when passing capital sentences on Nigeria. Interestingly, these pastors run their churches in conformity with the law in other countries. They submit their finances for regular checks by the authorities in the UK, the US and other places. But in Nigeria they live in triumph of the law.

    Pastor Chris Oyakhilome’s Loveworld Television Network was sanctioned in the UK for broadcasting ‘’potentially harmful and unsubstantiated’’ claims about Covid-19 vaccine. But in Nigeria where he continues to traffic in COVID conspiracies, he has not been made to account for his transgressions because he is a ‘’man of god’’. Perhaps, this is why Nigeria is a ‘’scam’’.

    If Nigeria is a scam, then it is because of leaders who sit on high and trample on the laws governing the land. If Nigeria is a fraud, then it is because of clerics who go into concordats with politicians every election season; campaigning for them on the pulpit and commanding the bloodhounds of hell against those who do not accept their ‘’anointed candidates’’.

    The clergy is as tainted as the political class.

    Also, a civil servant, who earns N150,000 monthly but has kids in UK schools and with real estate dotting major cities in the country, will revile Nigeria submerging his own hypocrisy in lamentations and jibes at the state. He ignores conveniently his complicity in the corruption ravaging the country. In addition, some citizens spurn laws, rules and regulations. Where there are traffic lights, they ignore them; where there are procedures, they bypass them, and where there are standards put in place for effective service delivery and operations, they abandon them.

    Yet, they all blame ‘’Nigeria’’ for the status quo as if the country exists without its people. The problem with Nigeria is a people problem. But the tragedy is that no one wants to accept liability for the appalling state of things. We cast the blame at the feet of ‘’abstract Nigeria’’. We are all complicit in the degenerative emasculation of Nigeria.

    Instead of abiding in wilful fatalism about Nigeria, we should project goodness and positivity into the system while working at making our country what we want it to be. Nigeria is what we make of it. The political class is flawed. But that is the reason a new generation of leaders must emerge and take the reins. None but ‘’ourselves can free our minds’’. Citizenship is a call to duty.

    • Fredrick Nwabufo, fredricknwabufo@yahoo.com
  • Case for private sector involvement in COVID-19 vaccine rollout

    Case for private sector involvement in COVID-19 vaccine rollout

    By Adewale Okoya

    It is certain that humanity will not forget in a hurry the devastating impact of the coronavirus pandemic or Covid-19 on social and economic life. Today, the pandemic remains the most potent threat to humanity. Apart from putting the lives of tens of millions of people at risk and actually being responsible for the deaths of millions of others, Covid-19 pandemic has threatened the livelihoods of tens of millions more.

    A joint statement by ILO, FAO, IFAD and WHO in October 2020 said, “Tens of millions of people are at risk of falling into extreme poverty, while the number of undernourished people, currently estimated at nearly 690 million, could increase by up to 132 million by the end of the year.” To be sure, the fear of the pandemic is palpable and governments across the globe are rising to the challenge to ensure a return to normal living, even if it will be a compromised one.

    The silver lining has been the unprecedented speed in the development of a vaccine to turn the tide in the spread of the pandemic. The development of vaccines means that the end of the coronavirus pandemic is in sight. In December 2020, the United States pioneered the rollout of the Covid-19 vaccines and other countries soon followed in its footsteps. Nigeria was not left out in the exercise.

    According to Dr. Osagie Ehanire, Nigeria’s Minister of Health, between 80 and 85 million doses of vaccines are guaranteed for the country based on its arrangements with the African Export-Import (Afrexim) Bank.

    The country commenced the vaccination exercise on the 2nd of March 2021 after receiving the first batch of 3.9 million doses of AstraZeneca’s Covid-19 vaccine as part of the COVAX facility arrangement, spearheaded by GAVI and the World Health Organization (WHO). The vaccines were then allocated by the National Primary Health Care Development Agency (NPHCDA) to all the states in Nigeria. However, the rollout in Nigeria has not been a smooth one. Overall, the most important battlefield is vaccine distribution. There is simply nothing that matters more right now than optimal execution of the vaccination programme. Nagging issues on how to properly manage and speed up the immunisation campaign continue to agitate the minds of various stakeholders in the country’s healthcare sector.

    Their concerns revolve around the low uptake of the vaccine among healthcare workers and the need to involve the private sector in the vaccine rollout. More worrying is the continuing burden of distributing the vaccine entirely free by the federal government, which from an economic standpoint is not sustainable. There is no doubt that adding the huge cost of procurement and distribution of the vaccine to the country’s already mounting debt burden is not the way to go.

    Recent experiences in the countries with the largest outbreaks demonstrate that private sector can play a crucial role in the response effort. In several of the developed countries such as the United States, Europe, and South Africa to name a few, the power of the private sector has been harnessed to help decentralise and accelerate vaccinations among the populace.

    To effectively address the Covid-19 vaccine rollout, it is essential for the federal government to partner with and leverage the competencies available in the private sector, including not- and for-profit organisations. Although one cannot ignore the experience of the public sector in the handling of vaccination exercises in this country, the sheer magnitude and significance of the task at hand demands a different approach, especially putting into consideration the extra edge which private sector operators possess in delivering services. According to the NPHCDA, approximately 965,000 people have been vaccinated as of April 6, representing 48 per cent of the targeted population to be vaccinated in this first phase.

    It must be stated that every country in the world has a routine childhood immunisation program. However, not all countries are well situated to deliver vaccines to adults, particularly to the elderly and the most vulnerable. By allowing the participation of the private sector, a higher success rate will be assured while provision of essential health services in various government hospitals and centres will not be neglected. The private sector represents an important means of providing surge capacity in responding to massive number of Nigerians who are queuing up to receive the Covid-19 vaccine and to help ensure that even routine health services continue to be provided by government healthcare workers.

    Speaking at an emergency stakeholder meeting on the Covid-19 vaccine rollout hosted by the Healthcare Federation of Nigeria (HFN) this month, Founding Partner of the Anadach Group, health specialist for the WHO in the Middle East and North Africa and East Asia regions, Dr. Egbe Osifo-Dawodu, equally observed that “It is only with the involvement of private sector can Nigeria accelerate the vaccination programme.”;

    One could not help but agree with the resolutions at the HFN session that the government should partner with the private sector to scale up sensitisation and awareness on the Covid-19 vaccination programme and ensure an active and up to date Covid-19 vaccination website where information is published daily. Speakers at the session also advised the government to consider allowing Covid-19 vaccines to be delivered to large hospitals/healthcare facilities with over 250 workers.

    The views of Asue Ighodalu, Chairman of the Nigerian Economic Summit Group (NESG), who made a few remarks at the HFN session are also to the point. He advocated that the private sector should be allowed to participate in the vaccine administration process using a similar template to that was used for the Covid-19 testing programme in Lagos State, during which private sector players were permitted to charge a controlled price. His advice to the government to explore other vaccine options and to grant licenses to qualified private sector organisations to procure vaccines to complement those supplied by the government should be given close attention because this will allow the government to focus more on regulation of the vaccination programme.

    Considering the pent-up demand for the Covid-19 vaccine by the people, if reports of people offering money to be vaccinated are to be believed, the suggestion by Adeyemi Adewole, HFN’s Financial Secretary, that out-of-pocket payment for the Covid-19 vaccine should be encouraged for people who can afford it as it is being done in countries such as in Dubai and India, will be a welcome idea.

    It is heartwarming to note that several top government officials have also indicated their support for the involvement of the private sector in the procurement and administration of Covid-19 the vaccine. Dr. Betta Edu, Commissioner for Health in Cross River State and the National Chairman of Nigeria Commissioners for Health Forum, is on record for saying that, “We need to open the space and allow the private sector to come in. The number one thing that will bring efficiency into the health sector is to open it up to other key stakeholders.”

    The challenges enumerated by Dr Vincent Okpala, Anambra State Commissioner for Health, in getting the vaccine to go round in the state makes a compelling case for the involvement of the private sector. Said he: “If you look at what happened with Covid-19 testing, not using public resources to do travel testing makes sense. There is a growing efficiency that also came into that. Looking at that as a test case, one can argue for addressing the vaccine situation with the same principle.” It is obvious that an important path to victory in vaccine distribution is to renew the public-private partnership approach that was adopted at the outbreak of the pandemic.

    The government must once again work closely with the business community in order to accelerate the country’s fledgling economic recovery. The private sector must also demonstrate the commitment and competence required from them when called upon to take part in the effort to ensure efficient vaccine distribution. The private sector must get ready to move forward together with the government so that the country can return to the normalcy we all crave for. It is important to establish an efficient vaccine distribution programme and to encourage everyone to get the vaccine. Nonetheless, it is apparent that a PPP approach can help in amplifying that message.

    • Okoya, a former newspaper editor and social commentator writes from Lagos.