Category: Northern Report

  • Presidency and the future billionaires

    More Nigerian billionaires in high numbers will in the next 15 to 30 years lead the global Forbes list if the declaration by President Goodluck Jonathan last week Monday is anything to go by.

    Aliko Dangote and very few other Nigerians have only been able to make the list of the richest men and women in the world.

    Jonathan made it clear that the present set of young entrepreneur Nigerians and others coming behind them will not become billionaires through advanced fee fraud or other illegal or illicit businesses, but through legitimate businesses under the Youth Enterprise With Innovation in Nigeria (YouWIN) and other programmes his administration has lined up to revolutionalise creation of jobs for the teeming Nigerian youth.

    He was particularly happy to announce that the YouWin programme alone has been able to create over 27, 000 entrepreneurs in the country, who have in turn employed thousands of Nigerians in their businesses.

    Declaring the third edition of the YouWin programme open at the Banquet Hall of the State House, Jonathan said: “The success rate in the implementation and operation of the YouWIN is commendable. The exhibition by few of the awardees which we inspected today is quite

    encouraging and it confirmed that Nigeria has very great youths, from interior decoration to art work to chemical engineering, technology and ICT and electrical engineering, we are all fascinated.”

    “We believe that these youths can take this country to a greater height. The products here will compete with the best in the world. We are gradually building a middle-class of Nigerians. In the next fifteen to thirty years, some of the top billionaires in this country will be among you,” he added.

    At the occasion, the President also declared that the era of god-fatherism experienced in many aspects of Nigeria’s daily life has been 100 percent eliminated in the YouWIN programme.

    He said: “The YouWIN programme demonstrates this administration’s commitment to reward merit and performance. YouWIN grants recipients have confirmed that they received the award without knowing anybody.

    There is no room for god-fatherism in this programme. Nigeria is the god-father of everybody.”

    “With this programme and other programs that we are coming up with, we are gradually moving our country from the belief, because sometimes young people don’t believe in themselves again because they have tried and seeing people they are better off than getting opportunities they are not getting, they begin to lose hope that without knowing the god-fathers, they can’t get anything from their country. We will all collectively change that focus,” Jonathan said.

    While 3,600 youths are expected to win grants of between N1 million and N10 million in the third edition of the YouWIN grants for their businesses, the Minister of Communication Technology, Mrs. Omobola Johnson encouraged Nigerians to apply online, stressing that winners are blindly selected based on their business ideas and proposals.

    It is not only good to create billionaires assisting the country to move away from its overdependence on oil revenues, acts of god-fatherism should be checked especially in every sphere of Nigeria’s economic life. It will really be commendable if these Nigerians who have so far got these grants under the YouWIN programme actually emerged winners without any manipulation from any quarters. For this alone, I will say Nigeria is on the right path.

    But the government should also begin to carry out this ‘No god-fatherism’ revolution in the civil service in order to ensure that employment into the service, promotions, selection for foreign and local courses and trainings, and retirements from service and other staff benefits and disciplinary actions are purely done on merit.

    The private sector is not exempted from the menace of god-fatherism as a contractor who knows no one in the system or refuses to grease the palms of some civil servants may have his or her contract payment file stagnated in a director’s table for several months or in a worse scenario, the file may be declared missing. This must change too.

  • A day of protest, tear gas in Abuja

    Nigeria Police in Abuja dispersed protesters who responded to the call by the Stop Impunity Nigeria, (SIN) and Citizens Wealth Platform (CWP) to raise the consciousness of Nigerians on the high level of financial mismanagement in the country.

    Members of the civil society organisations who had assembled at the Millennium park, venue for the peaceful protest were forcefully dispersed by the combat ready policemen who stormed the venue ahead of the planned take off of the protest ride.

    One of the Abuja Urban Mass Transportation Company (AUMTCO) buses hired to convey protesters to the National Assembly and other routes of the city for the sensitization was directly shot at leaving two teargas canisters exploding in the bus generation fumes that created a stampede as all panicking occupant made their way out of the bus.

    An eyewitness who pleaded anonymity told Abuja Review that the police drove into the venue in two vehicles. This was besides the other trucks which were stationed outside the venue waiting for further instructions.

    Fearing for their lives the protesters ran out of the venue towards the road a relocation to another take off point close to the initial venue to wait for there other members who were yet to reach the venue, this was also aborted as more canisters were shot in that direction further forcing the protesters out of the second point of convergence.

    Convener of the protest, Eze Oyenkpere said the peaceful protest was to further raise the consciousness of the public on the huge losses incurred on the commonwealth which have hampered on developmental projects of the country.

    He said the action of the police offends every rule of civil interface with her government especially as the people had only come out to say enough is enough on the way public funds are being managed.

    He said the law never said that the police should stop them from protesting more so that it  was to be peaceful protest for which they have complied with the law by informing the police who were to provide them protection.

    ”The police were suppose to escort us to the place where we were doing to submit our petition,” he said.

  • NTA’s Makanjuola, eight  others honoured

    NTA’s Makanjuola, eight others honoured

    Nine eminent women in the Federal Capital Territory FCT including prominent television personality, Moji Makanjuola, were celebrated in Abuja. The women bagged awards for being role models, having impacted the society positively, especially the women folk.

    All experts who showcased excellent performances in their disciplines, they were celebrated like queens and applauded like amazons.

    Among the honoured women was, President, International Federation of Women Lawyers (FIDA), Barrister Hauwa Shekarau, National Coordinator, Advocacy for Women with Disabilities Initiative AWDI, Ogolo Patience Ukpe, Founder, Nungsto Charity Foundation, Mrs. Jerusha Danladi Kisafi and Mrs. Mercy Macjones.

    Others were Television Presenter, Nancy Illoh, Mrs. Comfort Adesoye, Mrs. Marion Okpanachi and Mrs. Felicia Sani.

    Organiser of the award, Miss Joy Lifechanger said the distinguished women were chosen by members of the public for making a difference in a society largely dominated by their men counterpart.

    She said they had used their influence to impact life and advocated for the course of women in the society.

    The Convener, who is the President of  Life Changers Club International, said the 2013 Women of Influence Award Ceremony was put together to encourage, inspire women who are using their influence to impact humanity and make peoples’ life better.

    “The basis of the award is influence. Leadership is influence and influence is leadership. Not everybody in position of authority is a leader but these people in their various industries. These people use their status to impact life and these nominations come from people they have impacted.

    “We hear the voice of the people, we live among them and we can explain what these people do. This award will inspire them to do more,” she said.

    Mrs. Akpe of Advocacy for Women with Disabilities Initiative felt honoured. She described discrimination against women as her toughest challenge.

    She admitted there have been numerous challenges especially in situations of mentoring women to change their mindset to a better, more fruitful world.

    “For me, it is becoming one of the best things that have ever happened to me. It’s been success. I am really happy. I dream to be a solution to women who are downtrodden.”

    While she expressed optimism to do more for women and improve their lives to a better standard, she encouraged women to be strong and be positive irrespective of the challenges.

    Nancy Illoh said there was need to encourage other women to grow and succeed like those awarded. She hopes to witness a ballroom filled with women of influence not just within the country but in the global space.

    “I wish to see more women who will be bold and confident about leadership,” she said.

  • Kilishi: A travellers’ delicacy

    Kilishi: A travellers’ delicacy

    Many travellers to the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja have always longed for their departure date. They look forward to a huge bite of the flat-shaped delicious meat which the Hausas call Kilishi. The stands are fascinating spots following the inviting broad smiles of the vendors and the sounds emanating from the knives they hone at regular intervals.

    Their nostalgic and eager customers are never disappointed to get their free of charge slice of the meat for quality taste. The prospective buyers not only buy for themselves alone but also for loved ones in other parts of the country and abroad.

    Kilishi is made by cutting fresh beef into thin, wafer-like slices, seasoning with ground pepper, groundnut and other spices. It is thereafter dried in the sun or oven. The unique taste of this source of protein is derived from the sun drying, which keeps all the nutrient locked within it. It is mainly taken as a snack and the process of its preparation makes it preservable.

    Today, kilishi has gone beyond a local delicacy to an international snack.

    This was confirmed by our correspondents who paid a visit to the area 1 kilishi proprietors.

    According to the chairman of Kilishi seller’s association in Area 1, Mallam Nurudeen Katsina: “Most of our customers are foreigners. People from different parts of the countries come here to patronise us. They sometimes send us money to send them the meet abroad. Each of us has a complementary card.

    “We also make home delivery services. We supply to recognised Hotels and super stores within Nigeria.”

    The secondary school leaver said he went into the business when he could not further his education due to financial incapability.

    “I am a secondary school graduate and had the zeal to further my education but due to some odds I went into Kilishi business and I have been in this business for the past fifteen years. After my secondary school in 1998, to the Glory of Allah, I am the chairman of this association today, I have a house of my own, also a wife and kid all from this Kilishi business.”

    The Kilishi association boss appealed to government to improve the martetability of the snack by providing a permanent site for all proprietors and also lease loans to them.

    His words: “We are tired of running from environmental personal who always come to throw our goods away. We want the government to come to our aid to repackage kilishi business.

    “We need a shop where we can stay permanently and show-case to make our business look repackage and more unique. Mostly during raining season we suffer a lot of loss. We are pleading with the Government to help us with loan to boost our business and a shop where our customer can locate us easily.”

    Another Kilishi vendor, Alhaji Attahiru Bafarawa who spoke to our correspondents, said kilishi business is lucrative but regrets that the lack of sufficient capital has made the business less profitable.

    He said: “If I have money at hand, I will buy a cow at N180,000 but because I buy on credit, I pay N200,000 and this  is a huge setback to our business and after the sale of each cow we make N20,000 profit and it takes us three to four days before we could sell and return the money for another cow.”

    He added that business is no longer the way it used to be as they have no conducive place to stay.

    Appealing to government, Attahiru said: “We have a union, Association of Kilishi Sellers. We want the government to consider us, promote our business to the next level. If the government can give us loan which we will be paying certain amount monthly or there about to enable us buy cow on our own in order to make more profit instead of paying extra charges of N20,000-N30,000 when we buy cow on credit. We will appreciate it.

    “We also want the government to help us build a conducive shed where we can permanently stay to do our business.”

    Attahiru who has lasted 20 years in the business said he feeds his three wives and 12 children from the business.

    Meanwhile, a buyer, Madam Benedict Nwachukwuoke said Kilishi she prefers kilishi because of its fatty lack but regrets that the ones prepared in Nigeria are exposed to jams.

    She said: “Go to places like Ghana, London and so on, not kilishi alone fish, meat and so on are well preserved and protected from fly.

    So Government should provide a place for the sellers and educate them on how to preserve the dried spicy beef from flies and other insect which could be harmful to the body system.”

    Another buyer who refused to disclose her name said: “You can’t believe that personally I don’t like kilishi but my grandchildren like kilishi. As I was going back to Lagos, they said grandma, please buy Kilishi. They like it. Also kilishi is part of beef seasoned in a different way and a lot of people like it even in England we buy Kilishi. If you go to London and other foreign countries, you will find Kilishi there but not exposed like the ones here because they are always displayed in a show-glass.”

     

  • Fed Govt hailed on solar power in councils

    The Abuja Municipal Area Council (AMAC) has commended the Federal Ministry of Power for installing a set of new Photovoltaic Solar Power Systems for generating electricity in some villages of the Area Council.

    This is part of the Light-Up Nigeria, Access-to-Power for rural areas of Nigeria.

    In a letter of appreciation to the Minister of Power, Prof. Chinedu Nebo, the Chairman of the Council, Hon. Micah Jiba described as amazing, the execution of the prototype Lighting technology in Durumi community recently.

    He said the people of the area were grateful to the Federal Government for efforts to provide access to electricity to all Nigerians.

    Jiba promised to support the Ministry of Power with necessary logistics to enhance the smooth running of the ‘Light Up-Nigeria Project in the Area Council, just as he assured that his administration will support other means of alternative energy to complement the national grid.

    It will be recalled that the Hon. Minister of Power, Prof. Chinedu Nebo had last two weeks, flagged off a special Federal Government Rural Electricity Project tagged ‘Light-Up Nigeria – for villages without access to the national grid, with the inauguration of the solar-powered electricity facility in the FCT.

    The Durumi pilot project is expected to cover at least 1050 households, while also providing refrigeration for delicate hospital supplies and other ancillary points for charging of phones and street lights for the village square.

    Also the major inlet roads and the roads leading to the Chief’s palace and the community school will be provided with street lights.

  • T. Y. Danjuma hails Jang on peace

    T. Y. Danjuma hails Jang on peace

    Former Minister of Defence, Lt Gen. Theophilus Danjuma has applauded the efforts of Plateau State Governor Jonah Jang for the restoration of peace in the state.

    Gen Danjuma gave the commendation while commissioning a Medical Dialysis Centre in Bukuru, Jos, the plateau State capital.

    The medical centre, which is equipped with facilities to diagnosis and treat kidney and renal problems, is a privately-owned world class hospital.

    Danjuma said, “I want to particularly pay special tribute to Plateau State government led by Governor Jonah Jang for creating the enabling enviromennt for investors to invest in the state”

    He said, “This special hospital for dialysis is no doubt the best in Africa; this private investment was made possible with the restoration of peace to Plateau State through the efforts of Governor Jang.

    “Other investors should take a cue from the commissioning of this project that the state is safe for investment and they should feel free to come to the state and invest especially in the health sector.

    Earlier in a welcome address, Chairman of Dee Medical Centre, Bulus Pam Dareng said the mission of the centre is to offer preventive and creative medical care that will put a smile on the faces of Nigerians by providing excellent services.

    In his remarks, Governor Jang hailed the courage of the investor to invest in the state and called on other potential investors not to shy away from coming to Plateau, saying peace has returned to the state and is conducive for investment.

     

  • Plateau re-hires retired nurses

    Plateau State Governor Jonah Jang has re-employed 23 retired nurses as teachers in the upgraded school of nursing Vom, near the capital Jos.

    Governor Jang said the re-engagement of the retired nurses was part of government intervention in the health sector currently undergoing reforms in the state.

    State commissioner for health Dr. Fom Dakwak dropped the hint during the send-off and award dinner for the retired nurses for the nurses who retired between 1999 and 2013.

    Dr Dakwak said: “Academic performance by students in the college of nursing showed remarkable improvement from 45% to 90%.”

    He said, “ The feat was made possible with the deliberate policies of Governor Jang to re-engage the services of 23 retired nurses to lecture at the college of nursing.

    “The ongoing intervention in the health sub-sector of the state has started yielding fruits as the last results of the College of Nursing Vom, showed a remarkable improvement from an average 40-45 per cent to an impressive 90 per cent.

    He also expressed delight over the conscious efforts made by nurses in the state to build their capacity stressing that it had “greatly improved the delivery of healthcare services”, even as he maintained that the Midwife Service Scheme (MSS) was a portent tool that is impacting positively in the health sector.

    Jonah Jang challenged the management of the Plateau Specialist Hospital to evolve a “mentoring scheme” where retired Nurses could find a platform to “impact their virtues skills, and expertise to younger crop of nurses” for improved service. Jang, however, charged them to key into the on-going intervention in the health sector in the state saying his administration was committed to creating a conducive working environment in that sector.

    “Earlier, in a keynote address titled “Nursing and the challenges of unplanned retirement” the senator representing Plateau North Senatorial zone, Gyang Pwajok, noted that “most Nigerians workers dread retirement they failed to plan for it before hand and as a result scared of the unknown.

    Pwajok, who spoke through the Special Adviser to Governor Jang, on Labour Matters, Mr Samuel Kwamkur, identified “lack of preparedness, poor management of sources of income and reckless lifestyle” as some of the reasons why workers get jittery over retirement.

    While affirming that retirement was inevitable, the parliamentarian urged workers still in service to join cooperative societies, as according to him, “one of the challenges retirees are faced with is in accessing their entitlements in form of gratuity and pension after retirement.

    “Nurses are privileged because they have the opportunity to check their health and general lifestyles while still in service. We must see the positive aspects of retirement and take full advantage of it by planning well ahead of time. The senator charged.

    Also speaking, the Chief Medical Director of the Plateau Specialist Hospital, Dr. Sanusi Gidado, stated that the event was the first of its kind in the state urging other health institutions to emulate it by giving honour to its retiring staff for their service to humanity.

    There were goodwill messages from the Speaker, Plateau State House of Assembly. Rt. Hon. Titus Alams, the state Head of Service, Ezekiel Dalyop and a host of other dignitaries.

    The occasion climaxed with awards to personalities like the Plateau State governor’s wife, Ngo Talatu Jang, a nurse, and Dr. Paul Wai, the State Commissioner for Local Government and Chieftaincy Affairs, as well as, Hon. Sarah Yusuf, Commissioner for Environment. About 50 nurses were honoured at the event with five nurses posthumously honoured, amongst them the wife of former Commissioner of Finance, late Mrs. Paulina Agati.

     

  • Combating polio in Kaduna

    Combating polio in Kaduna

    AISHA got the virus when she was just two. Now at three, she cannot walk normally. The wild polio virus left not just the girl in agony; her parents are also devastated. For they had hoped she would bring them out of poverty when she got older and brgan to make money.

    Aisha’s parents were apparently among parents who resisted the polio immunisation programme, believing that it was aimed at controlling the number of children one gives birth to. Muhammad Bello, Aisha’s grandfather was quoted as saying that before she got the virus, they never felt any need to take their children for routine immunization, but today, Bello has seen the need after his grandchild got knocked down by the virus. He said “we never felt the need to get our children immunized, but now, I will do my best to mobilize our community”. Her mother, Zainabu was also quoted as saying that “I do not really understand what happened. Aisha felt sick for weeks and got a high fever. Her legs have now started to get very weak and she has a hard time trying to stand up. The doctor said it was too late, she may get polio, but we needed to confirm. In the past, we always refused vaccination because some of our neighbours told us the oral polio vaccine could cause sterility. Now, we know that it is not true and we can see the consequences. From now on, I will commit myself to be part of the social mobilization team”. That was in May 2012 and two weeks later, the little girl was confirmed to be infested by the virus, thus becoming one of the 30 polio cases in Sokoto state as at May, 2012.

    Today Aisha has joined the growing list of persons affected by the virus in a country regarded as one of the most entrenched reservoirs of wild poliovirus in the world. According to the World Health Organisation (WHO), Nigeria is the only country with ongoing transmission of all three serotypes of polio virus such as wild poliovirus type 1, wild poliovirus type 3, and circulating vaccine-derived poliovirus type 2. Interestingly, states in the northern part of the country are the main source of polio infections elsewhere in Nigeria and in neighbouring countries. For example, Nigeria or northern Nigeria is reported by international organisations as being the main source of polio in countries like Central African Republic, Chad, Cote d’Ivoire, Mali, Uganda, Kenya and other countries stretching from West to Central Africa and Horn of Africa. These countries have been classified as importation countries because they have stopped the transmission of indigenous wild poliovirus can be affected by importations of the virus. In addition, Nigeria is one of the three countries globally still considered as polio endemic nations, the others being Pakistan and Afghanistan. Incidentally, while Afghanistan and Pakistan are neigbours, Nigeria’s immediate neigbours have all eradicated cases of polio. Fresh cases of the disease in these countries have always been traced to states in northern Nigeria. But many states in the north have embraced polio, but it is generally agreed that a lot still need to be done if the disease is to be eradicated in the country. It is believed that the country is presently on the right track to stop fresh transmission of cases. But one thing that has been of concern to health workers and Nigerians is the fact that the same set of people seems to be immunized regularly, while several areas are ignored. So far, the country has recorded 52% drop in polio cases, 63% reduction in vaccine rejection while the number of states with ongoing circulation of the virus has reduced from 11 during the same time last year to nine. As at the last count, Borno, Yobe and Kano account for 72% of all polio cases in Nigeria so far this year while 3 percent of local government areas in the country  have recorded polio virus so far this year. Similarly, there has been a reduction of the polio genetic clusters in Nigeria from 8 to 2 while no Wild Polio Virus Type 3 case has been detected in Nigeria so far this year, last case 11 months ago.

    Be that as it may, The Nation gathered however that in some of the states of the north, principal officers of government and even key health officials have shown dislike for the polio eradication initiative. The Nation was told that in one of the states, the Director incharge of Primary health care is not positively disposed to the polio eradication initiative, while in another, the Secretary to Government is against the idea. It was also gathered that in some of the local government, refrigerators meant for the storage of the polio vaccine are taken away by highly placed local government officials. Available information had it that due top efforts of the state government, Kaduna recorded no case of polio for 30 months beginning from 2009 and when the government was beginning to beat its chest that the state was polio free, 10 new cases were reported in the state in 2012. Some officials of the state health ministry said that those fresh cases were traced to Zamfara state. But other believed that the set back was as a result of some children that were missed during the immunization exercise. But since the beginning of 2013, the state according to the officials has not recorded any case of polio. The state government has said it was determined to ensure that state is polio fr4ee and has deplored all machineries to ensuring success. This explain why the Deputy Governor, Ambassador Nuhu Bajoga had to abandon the comfort of his office in July to go in search of two children who reported missed out in the polio immunization exercise in Zangon Kataf local government area of the state and ensure that they were administered with the vaccination. James Swam Kazzah, Press Secretary to the Deputy Governor said that idea behind that visit was to determine whether the two children in the community who ‘missed out’ during the earlier immunization exercise had been recovered and rightly immunized to forestall any emergence of the dreaded polio virus in not only the local government but the entire state. He noted that like the Biblical analogy of leaving behind 99 sheep to search for one missing sheep, Ambassador Nuhu Bajoga left his comfort zone to trek long distance through bushy farmlands and muddy footpath to identify these two children for the sake of polio eradication in Kaduna state.

    Late Governor Patrick Ibrahim Yakowa had, while launching the first quarter polio immunization in 2012 said that “If Nigeria is to join the rest of the world in becoming polio-free, we all must allow our children to be vaccinated, and the responsibility of such task, to a greater extend, rest on the shoulders of our Local Government chairmen, traditional and religious leaders. As such I am calling on all the Interim Local Government Chairmen, traditional and religious leaders, to have a stronger engagement with stakeholders through increased commitment and accountability to the fight against polio. I have also directed all Commissioners and Permanent Secretaries to henceforth join hands with their respective Local Government Chairmen in ensuring the success of vaccination campaigns”. This tends to have yielded result as no incident has been reported across the state in 2013. The government under Yakowa initiated an award for the best local government in polio eradication. The government, Yakowa had said “has made polio eradication initiative a top priority in the health sector”, adding that “in our fight against this disabling disease, the Kaduna State Government had spent huge resources in 2011 in the area of immunization, advocacy and control of the polio menace, with a view to retaining the polio-free status of the state. We are also committed to sustaining the state Task Force on Immunization meetings in order to ensure coordination of the polio eradication initiative. I have also directed all the Local Government Councils in the State to ensure regular meetings of the Local Government Task Force on Immunization and engagement of stakeholders, especially traditional and religious leaders in the campaign against polio in their respective areas. It is the combination of these efforts that made Kaduna State polio-free since 2009. The success achieved was a result of the commitment made, by both the Government and also by other stakeholders in the state, particularly our traditional and religious leaders. “In order to ensure that Kaduna State continues to be polio-free this year and beyond, the Kaduna State government has decided to identify and honour people who have positively influenced and advanced the polio eradication initiative in their respective domains. I will like to draw your attention to the fact that even though we have been free from polio since 2009, the fight against polio in Kaduna State is not yet over. This is because Kaduna State is surrounded by polio infected states. I have also been informed that there are still some children that have missed the routine polio immunization administered by both parents and caregivers. I therefore wish to charge those that are going to be decorated today as Polio Ambassadors to continue to support the polio eradication initiative in their respective constituencies, so that Kaduna State continuously remains a polio-free State and even assist in the eradication of polio in our neighbouring state”.

     

     

     

    The world Health Organisation however believes that with concerted efforts by government and other stakeholders, Nigeria has the capacity to eradicate polio within nine months. WHO Country Director in Nigeria, Dr. David Okelo, was once quoted as saying that, “Nigeria has made a lot of progress in the fight against polio; we have done 95 percent of the work due to the efforts of traditional and religious leaders. We have just a fraction left so let us finish the job as quickly as possible. “Government should mobilize communities and leaders to finish the remaining part in the next six to nine months. We need to finish polio and move on to other problems such as cholera, high maternal mortality and other child killer diseases. We can do it and we should do it.”  Many believe that the governors of the north have not shown serious commitment to the polio eradication campaign. But at one of the meeting of the Northern States Governors Forum, they resolved to strengthen the state task force on polio eradication in each of the states by making it more functional; sustain the quarterly interaction of governors with their traditional rulers and to prevail on Local Government Chairmen in the Northern States to continue to support Polio Programmes particularly through sustained enlightenment campaigns. Interestingly however, apart from the regularly National Immunisation Day exercises, there is little being done by the various states to ensure acceptability of the vaccine as fresh polio cases have been reported in a few states.

    Even though there are few countries where people still carry the disease and in Nigeria where vaccine rejection has become common, there is still a global fight against the disease. As part of the global campaign, hundreds of scientists, doctors and other experts from around the world in May, 2013 launched the Scientific Declaration on Polio Eradication declaring that an end to the paralyzing disease is achievable and endorsing a comprehensive new strategy to secure a lasting polio-free world by 2018. At the launch, over 400 signatories urged governments, international organisations and civil society groups around the world to do their part and put an end to polio.

     

     

    with the aim to protecting the world’s most vulnerable children and future generations from this preventable disease. They also call for full funding and implementation of the Polio Eradication and Endgame Strategic Plan 2013-2018, developed by the Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI). However with polio cases at an all-time low and the disease remaining endemic in just three countries around the world, the Global Polio Eradication Initiative had estimated that ending the disease by 2018 can be achieved for a cost of approximately $5.5 billion. Dr. Walter Orenstein, professor and associate director of the Emory Vaccine Center at Emory University and former director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s National Immunization Program was quoted as saying that “we have the tools we need and a time-limited opening to defeat polio. The GPEI plan is the comprehensive roadmap that, if followed, will get us there”. On his part, Dr. Zulfiqar Bhutta, founding director of the Center of Excellence in Women and Child Health at Aga Khan University ad one of the doctors that has signed a declaration calling for the eradication of Polio by 2018 globally noted that “securing a lasting polio-free world goes hand in hand with strengthening routine immunization. We need all countries to prioritize investments in routine immunization”.

    The declaration, part of which The Nation obtained online, emphasizes that achieving polio eradication requires efforts interrelated with strengthening routine immunization which is a new focus of the GPEI plan, pointing out that as the last cases of polio are contained, high levels of routine immunization will be critical. In the same vein, it noted that resources and learning from polio eradication efforts can be used to strengthen coverage of other life-saving vaccines, including for children who have never been reached with any health interventions before. Professor Helen Rees, executive director of the Wits Reproductive Health and HIV Institute at the University of the Witwatersrand in South Africa, who signed the declaration believe that as long as polio exists anywhere in the world, it threatens children everywhere. According to him, “by pursuing in parallel all of the steps needed to reach eradication, including the introduction of inactivated vaccines, countries have a complete path to eliminate polio’s threat.”

    Investigations revealed that those who signed the declaration were drawn from 80 countries and is being promoted by more than 40 leading universities and schools of public health and medicine are promoting the declaration on their websites, including that of Nigeria’s Redeemer’s University. As at the time the declaration was signed in May, 2013, only 16 cases of polio had been reported globally with India, long-regarded as the most difficult place to eliminate polio, said not to have recorded a case in more than two years. This perhaps explains why Dr. David Heymann, head and senior fellow at the Chatham House Centre on Global Health Security and a signatory of the declaration believe that “eradicating polio is no longer a question of technical or scientific feasibility. Rather, getting the most effective vaccines to children at risk requires stronger political and societal commitment. Eliminating the last one percent of polio cases is an immense challenge, as is the eradication endgame after that. But by working together we can make history and leave the legacy of a polio-free world for future generations.”

    However, polio survivors in Nigeria have joined the campaign against the virus. Karima Usman, a 38-year-old Nigerian mother of three, is one of such people who has decided to take up the task of convincing parents take their children for vaccination against polio.  According to her, “no one used to go from house to house giving OPV [oral polio vaccine] when I was small. That is why I got polio. Now, OPV is available – but some parents are not letting their children take it.I got involved in this work three months ago and I will not rest till every parent agrees to get their child vaccinated. Most people get convinced easily when they see my condition and realize what poliovirus can do. But then there are some who are totally non-compliant due to spread of misinformation and myths and don’t even come to the door to talk to me. I don’t give up. I get off my tricycle and walk on my hands and go inside their houses to talk to them.”

    Like Ms Usman, Auwal Bawa, Captain of the Katsina state Para-soccer team is another polio survivor who has d4ecided that it was time to join the campaign for the eradication of polio in Katsina state and in Nigeria. According to him, “I tell people that my ability lies in my mind. And it is the mind that they need to listen to and accept OPV and not false rumours”. Melisa Corkum of the UNICEF communication office in Nigeria said that “Polio survivors are recording a success rate of 70 per cent on an average over the last three polio immunization rounds. In other words, they are able to convince seven out of every 10 parents to accept OPV for their children which are remarkable. As the number of cases of polio has decreased over the years, the PSGs serve as a stark reminder of what the virus can do – and help in overcoming non-compliance.” In Sokoto, there is Fatima Aliyu, a mother of two and a polio survivor who has also joined in the campaign to ensure that every child in Sokoto is immunized. It is imperative to say that Sokoto is one of the states in the country struggling with non-compliance. In her words, “I call all men to support their wives to bring out their children for immunization. Would we have come out to support this programme if the vaccine had any side effects?”

     

  • Zungeru: from seat of power to nothing

    Zungeru: from seat of power to nothing

    Beneath the frenzy of the coming Centenary Celebration of the Amalgamation of the Northern and Southern Protectorates of Nigeria in 1914 lies the derelict plight of Zungeru, which, for many reasons, would have qualified for a 21st century mega-city.

    Zungeru prides itself as the first capital of the Northern Protectorate, the seat of colonial lords at the inception of the political configuration called Nigeria.

    History has it that it hosted the ceremony that gave birth to the amalgamation of the Southern and Northern Protectorates 100 years ago. It is from there the name of the country was first proclaimed.

    Today the town is a sad reflection of its historical antecedents and archeological significance. It is a shadow of what should have been a monumental city that ought to be celebrated even as the country marks the centenary of its political existence.

    Aside from being the birthplace of Nigeria, the town has the singular honour of hosting the birth of a former President of Nigeria, the great Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe, the former Biafrian warlord, Dim Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu, a literary icon, Prof Cyprian Ekwensi and many other notable Nigerians.

    Today the nation’s cradle is not just a shadow of itself but a forgotten town that could best go for a glorified village. The sleepy and serene linear settlement is in total disarray and rot despite its past glory. It has reverted to, if not worse than, its pre-colonial days.

    The town which hosted the agents of Her Royal Majesty, the Queen of England, a replica of today’s Aso Rock Villa, has been reduced to one of the many neglected villages in the country, lacking in basic social amenities. Indeed one can hardly find any traces of glory or grandeur in what was the nation’s most powerful enclave. All the glory has sadly gone away.

    About 85 years ago when the colonial administrators left the town for Kaduna, most of the legacies of the Queen’s agent who worked and lived in Zungeru were still on the ground. Now, however, most of these structures have become dust and ash.

    Worse still is the complete vandalism of most of the infrastructure left behind by the British administration while the few remaining are left at the mercy of the elements. But for the recent intervention to renovate the colonial cemetery, it is practically evident that there is no deliberate effort to preserve all these legacies.

    Apart from the renovated colonial cemetery, relics of dilapidated and weather-beaten African Officers Mess, Sir Lord Lugard’s Office, Swimming Pool, Flower Pots and ruins of the Amalgamation Hall where Nigeria was named, hardly can a visitor to this ancient heritage link Zungeru among the great settlements in the country.

    Tucked in the heart of present-day Niger State in Wushishi Local Government Area, Zungeru, the glorious past of Northern Nigeria and indeed the country, is surrounded by Tegina to the Northwest, Kagara to the North, Minna to the Northeast and Wushishi to the South. River Kaduna remains its faithful neighbour for years.

    With only one pothole-infested road running through the heart of the town, public schools, a dilapidated post office and the ruins of colonial structures, nothing material can link this town with the enviable role it played in the evolution of Nigeria.

    Successive governments have abandoned the town to its fate to live or die naturally. Even when towns were made local government headquarters, Niger State Government relegated Zungeru to a ward level. Like the biblical Jacob, Wushishi was picked as the council headquarters, a development which further hurt the glory of Zungeru.

    Today, aside from the 108-year old United Mission School, a joint project by the Anglican and Baptist churches in 1905 now named after Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe, a former pupil of the school and the Ebenezer Anglican Church (both structures have been renovated over the years by the local education authority and the church), hardly can one find any trace of its glorious past in this rusty and dusty town.

    But in 1991, many thought the book of remembrance had been opened concerning the town when the military administration of General Ibrahim Babangida began the construction of a research centre in the town – the Nnamdi Azikwe International Centre -a project in honour of a “son of the soil”, the nation’s first African Governor-General and President, but alas, the project has since been abandoned.

    Lamenting the dwindling fortunes of the town, Mallam Tanko Yusuf, a native and a tour guide in the town bemoaned the outright abandonment of the town by successive governments. He was especially hard on administrations since 1960.

    “When the colonial masters were here, Zungeru was given its right share of attention; even when the capital moved to Kaduna, the town was not neglected but since independence, our leaders have forgotten, abandoned and neglected the birthplace of this country,” Yusuf said with nostalgia.

    Tracing the history and the emergence of Zungeru, Yusuf recalled: “There has never been a place in Nigeria that was reverted to a village like Zungeru. Though the colonial capital started in Lokoja for a year before it was moved to Zungeru, where the colonial lords called the shots for 14 years and then it was taken to Kaduna. Today, Lokoja and Kaduna are very much developed but Zungeru has been reverted back to a village status. It has been left to rot.

    “In those days of the colonial administration up to 1960, there was nothing you wanted from Zungeru that you could not get. The place was a beautiful place to behold but now, it is a shadow of itself.

    “This place should be a renowned place, a place of global attraction but we cannot bring the world here to see the town where Nigeria was given birth to.”

    Yusuf complained that despite spirited efforts by the residents, no government has shown concern about the town. According to him, “it is only when an event is to be held and important personalities are expected that emergency patch works are done to mask the monumental corrosion in the place.”

    If the natives are regretting the misfortune of the town, visitors who came to the town are devastated. Temisan Peters who visited from Warri, Delta State, regretted coming to Zungeru.

    “My expectations of Zungeru were high, being the first Northern capital and the birthplace of Nigeria. I had been hearing about the place and have longed to be here but sadly when I came, what I saw was not what I expected it to be,” Peters said with resignation.

    He added: “It is quite underdeveloped compared to the age of the community and the kind of people the community has produced and accommodated like the first President, late Ojukwu and others. I expected more and thought it would make a remarkable tourist centre but unfortunately, it is very under-developed.”

    With the centenary celebration gathering momentum, Peters advised both the state and Federal Government to rescue the town.

    “Zungeru remains the birthplace of this country. We have to give the town her rightful place and preserve all those monuments, all those colonial relics and turn the town to a goldmine and a tourist destination. The history of Nigeria is incomplete without Zungeru,” Peters said.

     

  • Boko Haram: fear of returning to school haunts Yobe pupils

    Boko Haram: fear of returning to school haunts Yobe pupils

    •Rich kids relocate to neigbouring states

    Twelve-year-old Yahaya Adamu is in Primary 5 but has sadly dropped out of school with four of his siblings. Why? Their parents ran out of Damaturu after the deadly onslaught on the state capital on June 16, 2012 by members of the Boko Haram sect.

    Yahaya’s meeting with this reporter was so dramatic. The encounter took place at Warsala, a border village between Yobe and Borno states when All Progressives Congress (APC) supporters from Yobe were anxiously awaiting the arrival of Governor Ibrahim Gaidam from England.

    “I cannot sell my eggs for N20. You pay N30 or I go away”.

    The firm tone and clear command of English of the teenager struck me. I was soon to discover the situation of the helpless boy who hopes to be a medical doctor but has been forced by circumstances to resort to hawking boiled eggs.

    Apparently, the case of Yahaya Adamu is just a drop of water in an ocean as many students both from primary, secondary and tertiary education have dropped out of school within Yobe and Borno axis due to the two years ceaseless insurgency that has characterised the region in the last few years.

    Until June 18, 2012 when the second deadly Boko Haram attack in Damaturu forced people indoors for three days following a 24-hour curfew imposed by the military, learning was still very smooth across Borno and Yobe states as schools before then were not being targeted by the Boko Haram insurgents. The shift of attacks on schools in the middle of 2013, however, has caused untold havoc in human, psychological, economic and infrastructural terms.

    During the June 18, 2012 attack, several primary schools in Damaturu were burnt down but no life was lost in such schools as the attacks took place in the night when pupils were not in school. The attack on Government Secondary School Damaturu, Government Secondary School Mamudo in Potiskum and the recent one at the College of Agriculture Gujba which put together has left over 70 students including teachers dead, has dealt a heavy blow on the efforts of the Yobe State Government for instance to reversing the educational less disadvantaged status of the state.

    Yobe State Deputy Governor, Abubakar Aliyu, had in June, told the Presidential Committee on Dialogue and Resolution of Security Challenges in the North, led by its Chairman and Minister of Special Duties, Alhaji Kabiru Taminu Turaki, at the Yobe Government House in Damaturu, the state capital, that over 209 schools were destroyed in Yobe by the insurgents and that the state requires over N2.5 billion to rebuild the schools. That figure may have drastically increased as more attacks were launched on schools by the insurgents after the visit of the committee.

    Governor Kashim Shettima was quoted as telling the committee that the insurgents have destroyed over 823 classrooms with an estimated 15,000 students said to be out of school in Borno State.

    While many pupils and students have dropped out of school for one reason or the other, a good number of parents have equally withdrawn their children from schools across the state especially in the metropolis and other major towns in the state like Potiskum, Gaidam, Gashua, Buni Yadi, etc., to other neighbouring states considered to be relatively peaceful and convenient for learning.

    Yobe State Governor, Ibrahim Gaidam, has at several times condemned the action of the insurgents especially the killing of innocent students in the state but at the same time reaffirmed that his administration will not be deterred from discharging her responsibilities. One of such, according to the governor, is the provision of quality education to all Yobe children.

    “I must say that the act of these insurgents is unfortunate, devastating and highly barbaric…but their attitude will not stop us from fulfilling our campaign promises to the people of Yobe State, Insha Allah. We will continue to provide quality education to our children, free medical treatment to pregnant women and children under five years, poverty alleviation, good water, and infrastructural transformation of the state.

    “I am sad that the resources we would have used to provide other infrastructure are now being channelled to the reconstruction of these schools but we have to do it for the sake of the future of our children”, Gaidam said.

    To march his words with action, the Yobe government has so far rebuilt over 300 classrooms burnt down by the suspected insurgents according to Abdullahi Bego, the Special Adviser to Governor Gaidam on Information and Press Affairs.

    As Yobe State government embarks on rebuilding the schools, the vulnerability the school, winning back the confidence of some parents to send their children back to such schools and even the students themselves still remains a major challenge with the fear of recurrent attack.

    Like many others, Abdullahi was devastated after the Gujba attack on the school where his brother Mohammed escaped by a hair breadth. A man who was accompanying his brother to Federal Medical Centre, Nguru to undergo surgery for gunshot wounds said “I don’t care what happens but my brother will not go back to that school again”.

    Aisha is a single mother who has two daughters at the Federal Government Girls College, Buni Yadi in Gujba Local Government Area about 10 kilometres from the College of Agriculture where 42 students including a lecturer were killed by suspected Boko Haram members. She has never slept peacefully since the attack on the college because of her two daughters. She is thinking of transferring them to another school outside the state but limited resources remain her major challenge.

    “I have been so uncomfortable since the attack on the College of Agriculture Gujba because my two daughters are in FGGC Buni Yadi which is very close to that place.

    “Who knows, these people can go and attack these innocent girls. If I have enough money, I would have removed my children out of that school to another state like, say, Jigawa or Gombe,” Aisha stated.

    Another parent, Idris Abubakar, a civil servant in Yobe State, explained that it has not been easy with him since he divided his family for the children to get better education.

    “I have to relocate my children close to Masaka near Abuja for them to get better education. But it has not been easy managing a family away from my location. I travel most often to see them.

    “My only consolation is that I will soon retire from the Yobe State Civil Service so I will move and connect permanently with my family”, Abubakar stated.

    Investigations revealed that only low income earners in Yobe State have their children still schooling within the state. Most of the top government officials in the state have relocated their children to safe cities like Kano, Abuja, Kaduna and other big cities to continue their education.

    The Yobe State government and the Joint Task Force (JTF) have maintained that security has improved around schools across the state.

    The government has also began the construction of perimeter fence around the schools. A visit to GSS Damaturu reveals massive reconstruction work while a perimeter fence is almost completed around the school. The same is said to be going on at GSS Mamudo.

    School population on the whole has dropped in the state especially in some private schools and owners of such private schools have also relocated out of the state due to the insurgency.

    In the public schools, the students of Government Day Secondary School Damaturu, their counterparts at Mamudo are still at home awaiting the completion of the reconstruction of their school.