Category: Uncategorized

  • Flooding: Food scarcity looms, expert warns

    Flooding: Food scarcity looms, expert warns

    THE unprecedented flooding sweeping across many states of the federation is a threat to food security in the country and a sign of possible food scarcity next year, the Managing Director, Upper Niger River Basin Development Authority (UNRBDA), Professor Paul Shaba Marley warned yesterday.

    Marley, a professor of crop production, told reporters in Minna, Niger State, that the floods have washed away many farmlands, especially in the North.

    He said the country should therefore brace up for possible food scarcity on account of the devastating effect of the flooding.

    The river basin authority boss pointed out that the volume of water associated with flood is inimical to crop production adding that except the water in the submerged farmlands recedes quickly, especially in places where cereals are grown in the North, next year may be unpleasant for the country.

    He said: ‘’Except for rice that is highly tolerant of water, other cereals are not. Horticulture corps and other food corps in flood affected areas are being lost and these will cause the country big problem in food production next year because it may take long for the water to recede.”

    He observed that, “most town planning regulations are being flouted in the name of development. People build houses, shops and parks on water ways and whatever happens, water must find its way out and find its level and whatever is on its way becomes a victim as such obstacles are washed away by the flood.

    “Flash flood is very dangerous; it washes anything that is on its path. We recorded the highest devastation from flash flooding this year. It washed away thousands of houses and farmlands.”

     

  • Anger in Imo over Shell oil spill, neglect

    Anger in Imo over Shell oil spill, neglect

    THE people of the oil-producing communities of Ohaji-Egbema and Oguta in Imo State are angry. They are angry, like many oil -bearing areas of the country, that their rich deposits are not yielding them the desired joy and good life.

    Instead of the good things of life that should ordinarily flow in their direction they say all they have to show for 48 years of oil exploration are pain, death, deprivation and environmental abuse.

    They are accusing Shell Petroleum Development Company (SPDC), in particular, of hazardous environmental practices and refusal to give something back to the society under the principle of Social Corporate Responsibility.

    Such was the frustration of the people that some youths and elderly women from in Umudike, Etekwuru and other adjoining villages in Ohaji Egbema Council Area recently publicly protested their plight, taking over the Umudike-Assa-Etekwuru delivery pipeline.

    They also stopped the maintenance team sent by Shell to clean up a crude oil spillage along the pipeline.

    The angry protesters who displayed placards with various inscriptions like ‘SHELL stop killing our people’; ‘Compensate victims of the 2001 pipeline explosion’; ‘SHELL activities have destroyed our environment’; “We demand an end to SPDC marginalization’; “SPDC has turned our oil into a curse’, among others, refused all entreaties by the SPDC team to allow them clean up the spilled oil.

    Leader of the youths, Mr Reginald Egini, said the spill was a disaster too many for the communities, having rendered hundreds of acres of farmland unproductive.

    “This is not the first time we are suffering as a result of oil spillage. In 2001, there was a pipeline explosion that killed about 13 people with several others severely burnt and eventually incapacitated and SHELL promised to pay compensation but nothing has been done up till today,” he said.

    The youth leader who vowed that the people would resist repair of the pipeline or clean up of the spilled oil until the company properly negotiates with the people added: “There should first be an Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) to ascertain the level of damage on the environment because we are farmers and any damage on the soil will drastically affect our means of livelihood”.

    He said the communities have nothing to show for all the oil sourced from the area since 1964.

    “There is no single hospital, school, market built by SPDC in the community. Neither has it given our youths employment or scholarships but they have kept making promises they never cared to fulfil.”

    He handed Shell a list of demands that includes replacement of the old pipelines to avoid continuous oil spillage; payment of all outstanding compensation, including the N4billion awarded the community by a Federal High Court in Port Harcourt; provision of employment for graduates and artisans from the community.

    A 99-year-old woman who gave her name as Mama Felicia told The Nation that she decided to join the protest because the community is no longer safe and the land is no longer productive for agriculture.

    “If we didn’t join the youths the protest might not be taken seriously, but when they see me they will understand the weight of our pain,” she said.

    When contacted the traditional ruler of Umudike community, Ezeali James Nwanro, said the protest was premature.

    He said: “When the spillage occurred, I was informed and I knew that SPDC would first embark on preliminary investigation to know if the spillage was an act of sabotage, in which case no compensation will be made or equipment failure; where the communities will be paid for any damage as a result of the spillage. It is only after the investigation that we can know what to do as a community.

    “The youths are not in a position to speak for the community, we have leaders and myself as the traditional ruler and we will do everything possible to ensure that Shell does the right thing. So preventing the team from carrying out the inspection is not in the best interest of both parties”.

    The SPDC team declined to speak.

     

  • Thousands protest in Kano over anti-Islam film

    Thousands protest in Kano over anti-Islam film

    •Fresh curfew imposed on Damaturu, Potiskum
    •25 Boko Haram members arrested

    THOUSANDS of Muslims marched through the popular Kantin Kwari Road and Ibrahim Taiwo Road in Kano yesterday, protesting the film, Innocence of Muslims, which they said insults Prophet Muhammed.

    The protest was peaceful all through.

    The protesters marched from the Fagge Mosque to the palace of the Emir of Kano, with the crowd growing larger on the way.

    The crowd denounced the brains behind the video and the USA where it was made.

    Some of them brandished American and Israeli flags, chanting ‘Death to America’, ‘Death to Israel’.

    They made a bonfire of the American flag at the Emir’s palace.

    One of the protesters, Amin Kabir, vowed that they would keep “protesting until the video producers are brought to book.”

    Another protester, Mohammed Turi said: “Whatever you say against our religion and our beloved Prophet will not discourage us from spreading his teachings to the world. There is no going back loving Prophet Muhammad and his teachings.

    “This (protest) is to send a message to halt the production of any other offensive film against Islam.”

    Some traders hurriedly closed their shops for fear that the situation might get out of hand but there was no ugly incident.

    Heavily armed security men were on alert while the protest lasted to ensure that it did not get out of hand.

    And ahead of a house-to-house search for Boko Haram members, the Yobe State Government yesterday imposed a fresh 24-hour curfew on Potiskum and Damaturu, the state capital.

    The measure was taken to allow the Joint Task Force (JTF) commence a comprehensive house to house search in Damaturu. The JTF spokesman in the state, Lt. Eli Lazarus, stated that the entire state capital has been cordoned off by troops to prevent suspected Boko Haram members from fleeing the town.

    Soon after the commencement of the curfew suspected insurgents of the sect were said to have engaged JTF troops in a shoot-out, but were subdued by the superior firepower of the military men.

    At the end of the operation, Lazarus said, 25 suspected Boko Haram members were arrested. He added that in the course of the operation, seven women and 12 children were used as shield by the insurgents to prevent their capture, but stated that the JTF succeeded in arresting the women and the children without recording any casualty.

    Items recovered from the suspected Boko Haram members include two Rocket Propelled Grenades (RPG), three General Purpose Machine Guns (GPMG), 700 rounds of ammunitions of 7.62 millimetres and 34 rounds of 5.56 millimetres, 29 handsets, three Motorola walkie-talkies, one GPRS, one binocular, seven laptops, one HP printer, one satellite decoder and one Army bulletproof jacket.

    Others are one camouflage raincoat, one transistor radio, eight empty cartons of RPG, one tripod, five Compact Disk plates and one tricycle, popularly known as Keke Napep.

    The JTF spokesman said the laptops and CDs will be analysed with a view to assisting the task force in its investigation of the activities of the sect.

    He said the curfew will remain in place until the end of the ongoing investigation.

    He appealed to residents not to panic and also cooperate with the JTF by offering useful information that could lead to the restoration of peace in the state.

     

  • Ronnie to partner Resource Centre

    Ronnie Schools, Ojodu, Lagos, is to partner with the Lagos State Educational Resource Centre to offer training for teachers in the area of production and utilisation of instructional materials.

    The three-day training is to hold at the centre’s ultra modern complex, Ogunnusi Road, Isheri Ojodu Berger, Lagos.

    The training is to build capacity of teachers as well as assist in teaching practice and help students build confidence.

  • Get the jump on colour blocking

    CHOOSE a challenge to work your wardrobe as colour-blocking is big this season in fashion. When blocking, you should bear in mind that no matter how crazy you want to get, you are not allowed to combine more than four colours. Go for colours like green, purple and blue and use a white and black pattern. Make your middle wears more flashy than the others; either your inner or top or shirt, if you are adding a jacket. Your belt is the middle wear if you are not using a jacket. You can colour-block with patterns also like laced materials. Anyway you want it, just don’t forget the rules: one colour each and not more than four colours. Colour-block away!

  • How passion is driving healthcare delivery in Delta

    How passion is driving healthcare delivery in Delta

    Dr. Joseph S. Otumara is the longest serving commissioner in the Delta State government. He has been at the commissioner of health for over nine years, before which he served as chairman of Warri South Local Government for three terms. He spoke extensively on multifarious issues of his ministry in this interview with Associate Editor Taiwo Ogundipe.

    We want you to give an overview of the Delta State health programmes.

    The government of Governor Eweta Uduaghan came into office five years plus ago, precisely May 29, 2007. One of the first things he set himself to do, perhaps as a medical doctor, was to declare a free maternal health programme in Delta State. And that was done precisely on the 27th of November, 2007. In a couple of months we will be celebrating our five years in that programme. Also about two years ago we also instituted the free under-five health programme. The programmes are focused on reducing maternal and under- five mortalities. Both mortalities are economic indicators of knowing how well a nation or state is doing. And as part of the global community, Delta State also buys into global world’ thinking of the reduction of maternal mortality by 3/4 and under-five mortality by 2/3 by the year 2015. We are also talking about the reduction of the incidence of malaria and prevalence of HIV.

    Basically, it is one thing to make a hospital available. The problem of sicknesses and death in Nigeria and in other parts of Africa is two-fold. There is the issue of geographical access as well as that of financial access for the people. It is either a government is unable to build sufficient hospitals for the patients to go to when they are ill or the hospitals are available but the people cannot afford to pay for the services. But here in Delta State the situation is different, with what the government has been doing. Uduaghan’s has built a lot of health centres. He has ensured that in every local government headquarter there is at least a general or a government hospital. Today, we have over 460 primary health care centres, over 60 government hospitals general or central hospitals and the tertiary hospital which is the teaching hospital in Oghara. So, within a radius of five kilometres, as directed by the World Health Organisation (WHO), there is a health centre or government general hospital.

    Having satisfied the condition of geographical access to hospitals, what the governor then did by instituting the free maternal and under-five health programmes is to ensure that hindrance to financial access is removed. So far, we have recorded over 230,000 patients benefiting from these programmes. From the time a woman is pregnant to six weeks after delivery, all medical attentions, treatments and laboratory investigations, if she comes to our government hospital, are free of charge. Government is responsible for the payment of all these fees. When a patient registers, she is given a card free of charge; she goes to see the nurses that take all the vital signs, which is also free of charge; she also sees a doctor who attends to her free of charge; if the doctor recommends a laboratory investigation such as blood test, ultra-sound scan; she also does it for free. And at delivery, whether caesarian section or normal delivery, it is also free.

    Some people believe there is bias for the health probably because the governor has a background in medicine as a medical doctor. What do you have to say about this?

    Well, not exactly. I’m sure there are a lot of things that you will see that the government is doing if you going round the state. You’ll see most of the primary and secondary schools renovated. They are in good working conditions and the infrastructures are excellent. Teachers have been employed. I wouldn’t know if I should say he is biased toward education too. And then, a lot of roadwork is going on intra-city and intercity. But I must say that as a medical doctor, he understands medicine very well. He has empathy for patients. He understands the issue of maternal and under-five mortalities. And being a doctor, he has done well in trying to bring issues to the x-co and trying to convince the cabinet members. If he weren’t a doctor, perhaps some of the urgency and attention which he gives to my memo wouldn’t have been there. Health care delivery in Delta State has truly gotten to a level that everybody is happy about.

    Every month, the government hospitals treat up to 50,000 patients in the under-five mortality programme. If you multiply 50,000 by 12, that is about 600,000 every year. In the past two years plus, you can imagine the number that we have recorded. That is 25 percent of the population of the state. Delta State population is about 4.2 million as at the last census figure. In which case, we are dealing with about one million of the population medically and surgically.

    Apart from the programmes of maternal and under-five mortality, we also have a programme we call the rural health scheme. In the scheme, we assemble doctors of different specialties, but basically ophthalmologists, eye surgeons, obstetrics and gynaecologists, general surgeons and general practitioners. We realise that in spite of the programmes the government has put in place, there are some people who would rather stay behind particularly in the rural areas and not avail themselves of these opportunities. If you go to the villages and other rural communities, you will see that diseases have marked and disabled some people completely. And so we go round thecommunities once in a year starting from the dry season in October till about January the following year. We take about 100 to 120 communities as we go round. Every local government is touched. Even if your community is not involved and you have a surgical condition, you can move into another community to enjoy the benefit.

    We are going to start this year’s programme in about a month or two months time. And we are even more equipped. We have a moving theatre and ward in which we are going to be admitting patients and carrying out operations.

    It is noticed that the drugs that are being dispensed in the hospitals and health centres are branded with the governor’s photographs, what informed this?

    Yes, we did that recently because we noticed that a lot of pilfering was happening to some of our drugs. We also did it to show that this is the man that is making everything happen. We also inscribed on the drugs that they are not for sale. They are free for the health programmes. So, anybody who sees any of the drugs in a chemist shop would know that it had been stolen. The drugs are specially made for the programmes. We have one of the best drug-revolving fund systems in the country. What we do in our health n a monthly basis to the pharmaceutical companies that supply the department that handles pharmacy affairs. The head of the department is a lady doctorate degree holder. We always have enough drugs although we cannot rule out the possibility of some being out of stock some times. We always query the pharmacists at the peripheral hospitals far away from the central drug store if they don’t make requisition on time. Requisitions are supposed to be made one week ahead when it is realized that the drug stock is depleting. programmes is that all the costs we incur on of drugs and reagents for laboratory investigations are calculated and paid for on a monthly basis to the pharmaceutical companies that supply the department that handles pharmacy affairs. The head of the department is a lady doctorate degree holder. We always have enough drugs although we cannot rule out the possibility of some being out of stock some times. We always query the pharmacists at the peripheral hospitals far away from the central drug store if they don’t make requisition on time. Requisitions are supposed to be made one week ahead when it is realized that the drug stock is depleting.

    We also have an appeal fund scheme for some health conditions that require medical condition outside the country. We have been doing that for five years. We started with N250 million, raised it to N300 million and in this year’s budget, it is N400 million. They are for the rare conditions that we cannot attend to in Nigeria. They include kidney transplant as is done today in India, the United Kingdom and the United States of America. These cost as much as N3 million to N4 million. People make appeal for this fund and the governor graciously, after giving his approval, releases this money. Other cases that had been handled included hole-in-the heart condition suffered by children, diabetic gangrenous ulcer, among others.

    What would you describe as the essence of Governor Uduaghan’s government?

    Governor Uduaghan’s vision is to have Delta State as one united entity. Before now there always ethnic clashes among the Itshekiris, the Urhobos , the Ijaws, etc. Today, we have a harmonious state courtesy of Governor Uduaghan. His vision is to have a united Delta State that flourishes with healthy, educated and economically empowered people. He has achieved this to a great extent since he has been in the saddle. He is also enhancing the geographical contiguity of the state by constructing roads and building bridges that will bring the people closer to one another. This bridge-building has been physical, political and social. He is also building schools and offering free education.

  • Floods: Mark, Foreign Minister meet Camerounian envoy

    Floods: Mark, Foreign Minister meet Camerounian envoy

    Nigeria has launched a diplomatic initiative to encourage Cameroun to check the raging water from its Lagdo Dam which has wreaked havoc in several states.

    Dozens of Nigerians have been killed, thousands rendered homeless and farmlands and livestock washed away by the flood triggered by excess water released from the dam.

    Worst hit are Adamawa, Benue and Cross River States.

    Senate President, David Mark and the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Amb. Olugbenga Ashiru, on Thursday evening met with the Camerounian High Commissioner to Nigeria, Ambassador Salahuddeen Ibrahim Abbas in Abuja on the issue.

    Mark and Ashiru asked the envoy to prevail on the authorities in Yaounde to manage the release of water from Lagdo Dam.

    Also, there were indications last night that the federal government might send a Mission to Cameroun next week for technical talks on the situation.

    It was gathered that the Senate President and the Foreign Affairs Minister conveyed the displeasure of the federal government to the High Commissioner on how more than 200,000 Nigerians have been displaced in seven states.

    The states affected by the release of water from Cameroun are Adamawa, Taraba, Benue, Jigawa, Kano, Kaduna and Bauchi.

    Others flooded by water from River Niger are Kwara, Kogi, Kebbi, Anambra and Kano.

    A reliable source said: “The Camerounian government sent a note verbal to Nigeria on the situation in Lagdo Dam and we decided to meet with the High Commissioner on the way forward.

    “But as a responsible government, there is no way we will sit by and watch Nigerians lose their lives and property to floods created from the release of water from Cameroun.

    “I think the two nations will jointly find solutions to the challenge of floods.”

    Ambassador Ashiru, who confirmed the session, last night, said the federal government has stepped into the flood problems.

    The Minister of Water Resources, Mrs. Sarah Ochekpe, also spoke with our correspondent, and said: “We have sent our team right to the dam to take stock of the situation. We will send a Mission to Cameroon next week for talks on how to manage the release of water from the dam.

    “They told us that the release of the water is important to avoid the collapse of the dam which can wreak more havoc. We have observed that when they release water from Lagdo Dam, after some days, it will recede. But this has not been so this year because of the structures that have been built.”

  • Why Mimiko must rule Ondo again

    The Ondo State Commissioner for Works, Mr. Gboye Adegbenro yesterday said the present Labour Party [LP] administration has impacted positively on the citizenry.

    He said Mimiko’s government has touched every sector of human endeavour, including health, education, agriculture, sports development, infrastructure and others.

    The commissioner said political sentiments apart, Mimiko’scontribution to the rapid development of the state is unprecedented, stressing that his legacy would remain indelible in the history of the state.

    Adegbenro spoke to reporters during the campaign rally held in various communities of Ifedore local government, including Ilara-Mokin, Ijare, Igbara-Oke and others The commissioner also said, “For us in Ilara-Mokin, we will ever be grateful to Governor Mimiko, he gave us a befitting public service Training Institute and appointed two of us as commissioners in Ifedore local government.

  • NDLEA nabs single mother, four others

    •Suspects swallowed 398 wraps of narcotics

    A 28- year- old single mother and four other suspected drug traffickers have been apprehended for alleged ingestion of 398 wraps of narcotics.

    The drugs, weighing 7.1kg, consisted 1.1kg of methamphetamine and 6kg of cocaine.

    The suspects were arrested by operatives of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) at the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport (NAIA) Abuja.

    NDLEA Commander at the Abuja Airport, Mr. Hamisu Lawan, said one of the suspects is the 28-year-old single mother, Udoka Egbuchelam, who ingested 73 wraps of methamphetamine weighing 1.1kg.

    Others, according to him, are 45-year-old Ezechi  Nwabueze, who ingested 95 wraps of cocaine weighing 2kg and 54-year-old Uzoukwu Joel, who ingested 85 wraps of cocaine weighing 1.5kg.

    Others are 36-year-old Obiora Okechukwu, who ingested 91 wraps of cocaine weighing 1.6kg and 32-year-old Eze Everest, who swallowed 54 wraps of cocaine weighing 900 grammes.

    Hamisu said apart from Egbuchelam and Nwabueze caught while boarding Ethiopian Airline flights to Malaysia and Istanbul, other suspects arrested during inward screening of passengers.

    Egbuchelam said she needed money to pay the tuition of her 5- year- old daughter.

    “I wanted to pay the school fees of my daughter. Since my arrest, I have been worried because I do not know how she is coping without me.

    The people that gave me the drug promised to pay me $2, 700,” the indigene of Mbaitolu Local Government Area of Imo State, stated.

    Nwabueze, who was selling shirts in Benin Republic, said: “I am the only child of my parents. My problem began when my shop got burnt and nobody was willing to help me. I was to deliver the drugs in Istanbul, Turkey.”

    He hails from Uzowani Local Government Area of Enugu State.

    Chairman/Chief Executive of the NDLEA, Ahmadu Giade said that the single mother would have been killed if she was caught in Malaysia, which practises capital punishment for traffickers.

    He urged members of the public to avoid trafficking, stating: “We are happy to prevent the untimely death of another Nigerian.”