Category: Uncategorized

  • Nigeria’s hunger ‘pandemic’

    Nigeria’s hunger ‘pandemic’

    Prince Charles Dickson PhD

    Sir: The old English reverend Thomas Malthus was wrong when he wrote that, for eternity, food production would grow arithmetically and that populations would grow geometrically, with the needs of the population easily outstripping the ability of humans to produce food. When Malthus wrote his treatise in 1789, there were about a billion people on the planet. There are now almost eight billion people, and yet scientists tell us that more than enough food is produced to be able to feed everyone. Nonetheless, there is hunger. Why?

    On April 21, the head of the UN World Food Programme (WFP) David Beasley said that the world was experiencing a ‘hunger pandemic’. That day, the Global Network Against Food Crises and the Food Security Information Network released the 2020 Global Report on Food Crises. It suggested that 318 million people in 55 countries experience acute food insecurity and are on the cusp of acute hunger. This number is a gross underestimate: the actual number – before the global pandemic – would have been closer to 2.5 billion, if you measure hunger by caloric intake for intense activity.

    The reasons for this hunger, they say, are armed conflict, extreme weather, and economic turbulence. More people could slip into the situation of acute food insecurity, the report says, as a result of a ‘shock or stressor, such as the Covid-19 pandemic’. Half of the world’s population fears going hungry as a result of the pandemic. Nigeria, amongst the reasons highlighted include that fact that we ate our years of fat, and now that they the lean years are virtually in front of us, more than anytime, the hunger looms even larger.

    What the International Monetary Fund calls the Great Lockdown has sent 2.7 billion people, according to the International Labour Organization, into either full unemployment or near unemployment, with many people one or two days away from desperate poverty and hunger. Starvation is already evident in many regions of the world. Nigeria is not an exemption, mass sack looms, and in some cases has started, for those that have a form of savings, they are spending and nothing is coming in, and investments are bleak.

    Hunger stalks Nigeria because so many people are dispossessed. If you do not have access to land, in the countryside or in the city, you cannot produce your own food. If you have land but no access to seed and fertilizer, your capacities as a farmer are constrained. If you have no land and do not have money to buy food, you starve.

    That’s the root problem.

    Over the course of the past decades, the production of food has been enveloped into a global supply chain. Farmers cannot simply take their produce to market; they must sell it into a system that processes, transports, and then packages food for sale at a variety of retail outlets. Even this is not so simple, as the world of finance has enmeshed the farmer into speculation.

    If there is any shock to the system, the entire chain collapses and farmers are often forced to burn or bury their food rather than allow it to be eaten. So here in Jos, Plateau farmers are destroying their products such as tomatoes, while Lagosians cannot have access to same tomatoes.

    The fact that so many people around Nigeria, including those living in the so-called rich states, were going hungry before this crisis is a profound indictment of the failures of governance, government and leadership. The fact that hunger is exploding exponentially during this crisis is a further indictment of our nation as a whole. Hunger is among the most urgent of human needs, and immediate steps need to be taken to get food to people in this crisis. But it is also vital that the social value of land, rural and urban; the means to produce food, such as seeds and fertilizer; and food itself is affirmed and defended against the socially ruinous logic of commodification and profit.

    For a group of people that would charge her citizens money to bring them back home, for a leadership that does not know where the Chinese doctors are, for a community of states that cannot feed her people, for a nation where state governors’ pride themselves in their capacity to lock out other states, and distribute almajiri kids, a people that are bent on the great lockdown when the world is desperately trying to open, our full moon may soon become burnt bread, unless we act fast, because hunger may be the uprising that will bring out the beast in us—Only time will tell.

     

    • Prince Charles Dickson PhD

    Jos, Plateau State.

  • Plateau inaugurates research committee for COVID-19 cure

    Plateau inaugurates research committee for COVID-19 cure

    The Plateau government has inaugurated a 13-man academic research committee, comprising members drawn from tertiary institutions in Plateau to find a cure for COVID-19 and other infectious diseases.

    Speaking at the inauguration on Monday in Jos, Gov. Simon Lalong said the team which comprised professionals from the faculties of pharmaceutical, medical and natural sciences had experience in research both locally and internationally.

    He said the committee was mandated to search for conventional and or alternative drugs for the treatment and cure of COVID-19 and design treatment protocols for the disease.

    “The state is endowed with herbal and medicinal products that can be harnessed towards building its capacity to withstand the threat of diseases such as the Coronavirus.

    “The practical alternatives proffered by the committee will reduce over-dependence on foreign solutions and help prepare the state in avoiding panic and desperation, if similar situations occur in the future,” Lalong said.

    He said the committee had one week to present a proposal to the government and was expected to submit a draft of research prospects within three weeks, while submitting progress report fortnightly.

    Other terms of reference listed by the governor for the committee included the conduct of clinical trials on the proposed drugs and design control mechanism for the spread of the virus.

    He added that the committee could incorporate any design that would curtail the pandemic and other subsequent diseases.

    He said the committee members, who were selected on merit and in recognition of their works in the field of research, should ensure that their result would help in establishing a modern infectious disease hospital in the state.

    READ ALSO: Lalong dedicates 57th Birthday to fight against COVID-19 pandemic

    Lalong appreciated the committee members for accepting the responsibilities toward home-grown solutions to health challenges in the state.

    “The pandemic is a reminder of the need to not only upgrade medical facilities and improve manpower but to develop preventive and curative capacity for infectious diseases,” he said.

    In his response, the Chairman of the committee, Prof Noel Wannang, from the Pharmacology and Toxicology department, University of Jos, commended the governor for initiating the historic gesture of getting a cure for COVID-19.

    He said the committee would not fail the government and would explore herbal or conventional drugs or go beyond to ensure it got the cure for the disease, saying it was a responsibility to humanity.

    Wannang said he was confident of the capacity of his members to discharge their duties and meet the timeline given by the governor.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the 13-man committee also includes representatives of the state government, the infectious unit of the Department of Medicine, Jos University Teaching Hospital and the National Veterinary Research Institute.

    (NAN)

  • Suicide bombing in Afghanistan leaves seven dead, dozens wounded

    Suicide bombing in Afghanistan leaves seven dead, dozens wounded

    A suicide bombing in Afghanistan’s south-eastern province of Ghazni left no fewer than seven dead and wounded a further 40 people, the provincial governor’s spokesman on Monday.

    “The bomber detonated a Humvee vehicle inside a facility of the provincial intelligence agency’s Special Forces early Monday morning,’’ spokesman Arif Noori said.

    Nasir Ahmad Faqiri, the council chief for the province, confirmed the casualties.

    The Taliban claimed responsibility for the attack, saying the incident left tens of the special forces of the National Directorate of Security, the Afghan intelligence agency, dead and wounded.

    On Thursday, the Taliban detonated a truck close to a military building in Gardiz city in south-eastern Paktia province, leaving five dead and 20 injured, including military and civilians.

    Recently, the Taliban attacked a military checkpoint in the Alishang district of eastern Laghman province that left dozens dead or wounded.

    The Taliban attribute these attacks as a response to a decree from President Ashraf Ghani, who ordered Afghan forces to go on the offensive against the Taliban after deadly attacks on civilians in Afghanistan.

    READ ALSO: Taliban attack military centre in Afghanistan, casualties reported

    Following the order, the Afghan Ministry of Defense has also claimed to have killed dozens of Taliban militants across the country during various ground or aerial operations. (dpa/NAN).

    The Taliban claimed responsibility for the attack, saying the incident left tens of the special forces of the National Directorate of Security, the Afghan intelligence agency, dead and wounded.

    On Thursday, the Taliban detonated a truck close to a military building in Gardiz city in south-eastern Paktia province, leaving five dead and 20 injured, including military and civilians.

    Recently, the Taliban attacked a military checkpoint in the Alishang district of eastern Laghman province that left dozens dead or wounded.

    The Taliban attribute these attacks as a response to a decree from President Ashraf Ghani, who ordered Afghan forces to go on the offensive against the Taliban after deadly attacks on civilians in Afghanistan.

    Following the order, the Afghan Ministry of Defense has also claimed to have killed dozens of Taliban militants across the country during various ground or aerial operations.

    (dpa/NAN)

  • Covid-19: Pan-Okun  to raise N500m

    Covid-19: Pan-Okun to raise N500m

    The Pan-Okun People Relief Response Agenda is to raise N500m aimed at ensuring effective health care delivery across Okun (Yoruba) land in Kogi West Senatorial District.

    The campaign is also aimed at ensuring procurement and distribution of consumable and non-consumable items to the people in the senatorial district.

    The fundraising programme under the chairmanships of Prof. Olu Obafemi and Prince Olusola Akanmode of the Elders Advisory Council and the Steering Committee respectively, has a deadline of two weeks.

    The Pan-Okun Relief Response project was established to cushion the effect of the lockdown occasioned by the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic.

    According to a statement from the General Secretary of the project, Dr. Ronke Bello, the categories of donors include Okun sons and daughters (home and Diaspora), friends of Okunland and corporate organizations, especially those whose operations are located or goods consumed in Okunland.

    With N500 million set as target for the fundraiser, prospective donors are advised to pay into the account number 1022765498 domiciled at the United Bank for Africa (UBA).

  • Herdsman convicted for grazing on Ortom’s farm

    Herdsman convicted for grazing on Ortom’s farm

    Uja Emmanuel, Makurdi

    A Makurdi Chief Magistrate, Mr Isaac Ajim, has convicted and sentenced a 20-year-old herder, Jaro Alhaji Ilu to one year in prison for violating the Open Grazing Prohibition and Ranches Establishment Law of Benue State.

    However, the Chief Magistrate after listening to the plea for leniency from the herder who hails from Awe Local Government Area of Nasarawa State reduced the sentence to a fine of N500,000 upon which failure to pay will attract one year imprisonment.

    The Chief Magistrate stated that the prosecution has proven its case beyond reasonable doubt to warrant conviction and the plea by the herder has further convinced the court of his guilt of the charge of open grazing.

    He advised those who want to engage in livestock business without ranches to go to States where there is no law prohibiting open grazing.

    He stressed that the law was enacted to prevent clashes between herders and farmers and was not targeted at any ethnic group or persons.

    Earlier, the Police Prosecuting Officer, Sergeant Friday Kanshio told the court that  the State Commander of the Livestock Guards, Mr Linus Zaki and his team while on patrol along Gbajimba, Guma Local Government Area of Benue State on May 5,2020, saw the herder with  cows grazing openly on Governor Samuel Ortom’s farm in Gbajimba, thereby contravening section 19(2) of the Open Grazing Prohibition and Ranches Establishment Law of Benue State, 2017.

    The herdsman pleaded guilty to the charge and confessed that he  came to Benue with cows that were grazing when he was arrested  and pleaded for leniency with a promise not to commit the offence again.

  • PHOTOS: MC Oluomo’s facemask sets tongue wagging

    PHOTOS: MC Oluomo’s facemask sets tongue wagging

    Our Reporter

    The face mask worn by Chairman of the National Union of Road Transport Workers (NURTW) Lagos State Council, Musiliu Akinsanya (aka MC Oluomo) has generated mixed reactions.

    Recall that last week, the NURTW boss directed commercial drivers not to allow passengers without face mask to board their vehicles.

     MC Oluomo

    Read Also: MC Oluomo to Lagos drivers: pick only passengers with face masks

    MC Oluomo

     

    MC Oluomo

    MC Oluomo

     

    MC Oluomo

  • PR expert speaks on challenges working with Nigerian artistes

    PR expert speaks on challenges working with Nigerian artistes

    Top Nigerian Music Executive, Ogagus Sakpaide has said one of the challenges of practicing as a Public Relation expert in Nigeria is dealing with Nigerian artistes, especially those in the music industry.

    Ogagus noted that artistes are reluctant to pay for services rendered to them, “This is tricky because I work mostly with music artistes, I would say it is the behavioral patterns of music creative’s. They never want to pay for anything and they also do not listen or see the importance of Public Relation, it can be a chore, after that, capital, employing labor etc,’ he said.

    He also reveal how he copes with music writing, PR, A&R and fitness without one affecting the other, “It is the hustle. One life, live them. I try to take everything at a different pace, and multi-tasking had become my habit. I can be at the gym lifting and at the same time, I am working upstairs. Chike’s new project came to me while I was training outdoors during the lockdown, so you just have to find a way to make it work. Moving forward, I am forging towards a certain space, for instance I have not written in a long minute, I feel like a fraud when I am called a writer. Motolani Alake is a writer, not me” he stated.

    To those aspiring to take up a career in the field, “Start from the ground up, I am still growing. Intern, work at any role you are offered, do not chase money at first. My first jobs paid peanuts but I was just happy doing what I had a passion for. I would also say listen to your gut and use your instincts to advance because the music sphere is a jungle.” He advised.

    READ ALSO: I drive cars that reflect my style—PR expert ‘Tokunbo Modupe

    Oghenevwogaga Sakpaide is a player in the African music scene as a music executive, P.R and A&R consultant who has helped direct the careers of music superstars such as Yemi Alade, Praizamong others.

    The Accounting graduate who had earlier wanted to be an auditor or a lecturer, before venturing into entertainment, started out at Smooth Promotions/Hip TV before moving to X3M Music as the A&R Manager.

    Ogaga Sakpaide launched his P.R and Branding consultancy agency ASAK Media and has represented numerous clients ranging from Flavour, Yung6ix, Kizz Daniel, etc. Ogaga has also had a lush affair in music writing and blogging and is currently an Admin at TooXclusive, the most visited music website in Nigeria. Ogagus is also an influential figure in the fitness space, headlining campaigns for Chi Active and Redbull.

  • Elite Castle is weathering the real estate climate

    Elite Castle is weathering the real estate climate

    Our Reporter

    Life, as they say, is no bed of roses and fir real estate companies, the story is no different.

    Sometimes, it goes smoothly, other times tough and rough. Real estate firms go through challenges and limitations which they do not make obvious to clients but someway pull through with crisis management.

    However, Elite Castle Limited is a luxurious real estate firm that has special offers for the comfortability of their clients and customers by having the best interest for them.

    Like everything has its pros and cons, the good, the bad and the ugly, one of the challenges Elites Castle Limited experienced so far is convincing people to pay on better quality of housing as the estate company deals more with luxury and smart homes.

    While rising demands of loans, environmental demands and technology brings about a positive approach towards the future of the market, they realise a rapid growth in competition, as every real estate firm tightens the belt by ensuring distinct and compelling packages for customers and clients.

    Due to demographic conditions, research has shown that most target switch preferences and taste, causing most estate firms to reconstruct and re-strategize their marketing approach to the target audience.

    Then the need to invest in social media strategies arises because brainstorming architectural and estate ideas and information would reach a larger audience thereby fetching more referrals, clients and customers.

    Sadly, almost all the real estate firms storm the internet with the company’s packages and offer for clients, thereby causing an increase in competition.

    Secondly, new technologies are a big hindrance for Real estate industry. Most firms cannot Keep up with the latest technological advancement and to install new software.

    Thirdly is a lack of affordable housing in urban areas.

    It is difficult to buy affordable housing near places of employment. The situation is especially critical in areas far from urban areas, this occurs when most firms building sites are not accessible, for proximity sakes, that’s a huge challenge as clients might not consider the offer.

    And finally, crumbling Infrastructure. Many real estate experts see this as one of the most challenging factors real estate brokers face. Bridges and roads to mass transit need repair and upgrade.

    Infrastructural needs affect where companies want to build or construct , which majorly affects the real estate industry.

    When building contracts are limited to a certain area, this means traffic for clients and customers won’t be coming up as it should. This challenge also affects the homeowners that live in that area. They often make decisions regarding where to buy houses that would be accessible to particular highways and easy transportation in the area.

     

     

  • Fed Govt launches school feeding in FCT

    Fed Govt launches school feeding in FCT

    •Programme ploy to steal N13b, alleges PDP
    •37,589 households in Lagos to get foodstuff next week

    By Faith Yahaya, Gbade Ogunwale, Abuja and Kofoworola Belo-Osagie

    The Federal Government has launched the distribution of school feeding programme in the FCT.

    The distribution is part of measures put in place by the Federal Government to reduce the impact of COVID-19 on parents of pupils who attend public schools.

    Before the outbreak of Coronavirus, pupils in public schools in Primary 1 to 3 were fed daily to reduce the number of out of school children.

    To ease the economic burden associated with the lockdown owing to the outbreak of the virus, President Muhammadu Buhari announced that the programme would be sustained despite the closure of schools across the country.

    According to the Federal Government, 3,131,971million households will benefit from the intervention.

    The ration of food, which is expected to last each pupil for a month contains a 5kg bag of rice, 5kg bag of beans, 500ml vegetable oil, 750ml of palm oil, 500mg of salt, 15pieces of eggs and 140gm of tomato paste valued at N4,200.

    Speaking during the launch in Kuje Area Council of Abuja on Thursday, the Minister of Humanitarian Affairs, Disaster Management and Social Development, Sadiya Farouq, said the intervention cost the Federal Government hundreds of millions.

    She said: “This programme is funded by the Federal Government, but implemented by the states. I am here to launch the commencement of the modified programme in the FCT and to conduct spot checks of the operations.

    “Hunger is a serious by-product of this pandemic crisis, which is why from the onset the ministry has been evolving strategies to facilitate humanitarian interventions.

    “The commencement of the school feeding programme today is based on Mr. President’s directive to the ministry that we should liaise with state governments to develop strategies on the continuation of the school feeding programme.”

    On the speculation that N679million is spent daily to feed the children, she said: “I don’t know about that.  I am not sure. I have told you it is in hundreds of millions because we are targeting 3.1million households all over the country. It is quite a large sum of money, but I cannot tell you precisely the amount but it is a lot of money”.

    On how beneficiaries were identified, she said: “The ministry, in consultation and collaboration with state governments, identified the distribution of Take-Home Rations (THR) to the households of the children on the programme as a feasible method of achieving this directive after exploring several options.

    “This is a globally accepted means of supporting children to continue to have access to nutrient-rich foods despite disruptions to the traditional channels of school feeding.

    “Beginning today in Abuja, this programme will target parents and guardians of children in primary 1 to 3 in public schools participating in the programme and a total of 3.1 million households are targeted for this intervention.

    “In addition to that, we also have the register from the school management where these children attend. So this is how we were able to identify the households where these children come from.”

    The ration of food was handed over to 3512 parents and wards of pupils who attend public schools in the Kuje Area Council after their vouchers were verified by officials in charge of the programme.

    The communities and number of households that benefited from the intervention are; Kuje Central SPS 820, Chibiri 388, Kwaku 380, Kabin Kasa 90, Gaube 830, Gidan Bawa 80, Gudunkarya 370, Kujekwa 22, Yenche 132 and Rubochi 300.

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has alleged that the school feeding programme embarked on by the Federal Government is targeted at stealing N13.5 billion from the public till.

    In a statement on Wednesday by the spokesman for the party, Kola Ologbondiyan, it said embarking on a feeding programme while schools remained shut on account of the COVID-19 pandemic, was a “huge scam”.

    PDP accused the government of using innocent school children as a cover to steal and funnel about N679 million per day to private purses.

    It described the action as sacrilegious, wicked and unpardonable.

    Read Also: ‘Fed Govt’s COVID-19 school feeding a scam’

    Distribution of food items to families of public school pupils under the National Home Grown School Feeding Programme (NHGSFP) will begin in Lagos next week.

    The Lagos State Universal Basic Education Board (LASUBEB) Chairman, Mr. Wahab Alawiye-King, was at the Sam Ethnan Air Force base, Ikeja, yesterday to inspect the foodstuff warehoused in one of the base storage facilities.

    He said from next week, distribution to the representatives of households of 37,589 pupils would begin in 202 distribution centres across the 20 Local Government Education Authorities (LGEA).

     

     

     

  • How to beat COVID-19, by physicians

    How to beat COVID-19, by physicians

    The West African College of Physicians (WACP) has called for establishment of more diagnostic centres and reagents for testing of suspected coronavirus cases.

    This, it said, will help to fight the virus in the sub-region.

    The body also commended corporate bodies as well as national governments of sub regions for steps that they have taken to mitigate the COVID-19 pandemic.

    “The protection of healthcare workers, need for the development of a common framework for the guidance of further response to the pandemic in the sub region, the need to build on the opportunities offered by the pandemic, and resulting good will, to strengthen the public health capacity and infrastructure in chapter countries,” they said.

    READ ALSO: Madagascar’s COVID-19 cure drugs sent to Nigeria

    Dr Albert Akpalu, FWACP Secretary-General, also asked countries to build on the opportunities offered by the pandemic for development of surveillance and research infrastructure and capacity, which are in dire need for effective public health response to outbreaks in the sub region.

    “There is also a need for national governments to be aware of the ready availability of Chapter Members and Fellows to draw on for national and sub regional services in meeting the medical manpower needs of the response to the pandemic in potential and actual areas of want in countries of the sub region,” he said.

    He added there was an urgent need for countries to accelerate and expand testing including community testing for a more accurate understanding of the pandemic in the region and providing reliable evidence for the prioritisation of next actions.