Tag: Afghanistan

  • We’ll eradicate polio this year, says Rotary

    We’ll eradicate polio this year, says Rotary

    Barring any unforeseen circumstance, polio epidemic will be eradicated in Nigeria before the end of this year, the Chairman of Rotary Foundation Trustee and former President Rotary International, Dong Kurn Lee, has said.

    Lee addressed reporters yesterday in Lagos as the guest of Rotary club District 9110.

    The occasion was part of his four-day working visit to Nigeria.

    The Rotarian is expected to evaluate the progress made in the fight against the polio scourge in Nigeria and inaugurate some projects associated with the polio campaign.

    Lee said: “We have just finished the polio-free certification in India. Now, we have three countries remaining, namely Nigeria, Afghanistan and Pakistan. But I want to congratulate Nigeria and our hardworking Rotarians. This year, there has been just one reported case of polio. This time last year, we had recorded 19 cases. So, progress is being made and, before the end of this year, we will eradicate polio in Nigeria.”

    The Rotary Foundation chairman listed the global progress in the eradication of polio.

    According to him, 99 per cent of polio cases globally have been eradicated.

    Lee recalled that when Rotary began the campaign in 1985, about 1,000 polio cases were being recorded everyday and 350,000 cases every year.

    “Last year (2013), we recorded only 400 cases globally and, this year, the situation is getting better,” he said.

    The Rotary chief hailed Nigerians for contributing to the global polio fund.

    He said Nigerians were the biggest contributors in Africa, adding: “Nigeria is a great Rotary country; it has the largest contribution towards the eradication of polio in Africa. I must thank Nigerians and our development partners, like the World Health Organisation (WHO), the United Nations Children’s Education Fund (UNICEF) and the Nigerian government. Their concerted efforts have made this progress possible in Nigeria,” he said.

    Lee said Rotary Foundation had spent $11 billion (about N1.8 trillion) since the beginning of its polio intervention.

    The Rotary chief said the organisation needed $5.5 billion to certify the world polio-free.

    He said: “We will eradicate polio globally in 2015 and then we’ll give three years’ interval to certify polio free. So, we have till 2018 to declare the world polio-free and we still need a lot of money. I will encourage Nigerians to increase their donations towards the polio campaign because until the world is free, no country is totally free from polio.”

    Also, the Chairman of the Nigeria National Polio Plus Committee Dr Tunji Funsho said the country was the first country to use the kill-virus vaccine after the virus had eradicated.

    Despite the challenges in administering the polio vaccine in crisis-prone areas, Funsho said the committee had covered 80 per cent of Borno State.

     

    “The remaining 20 per cent is in areas that are dangerous. But we have adopted a strategy of hit-and-run whereby security agencies would clear an area and our immunisers would move in to administer and go out immediately,” he said.

    He said the organisation had surmounted the challenges posed by religious fundamentalists who opposed the polio vaccination.

    Funsho put the estimated fund needed to eradicate in Nigeria till 2018 at $480 million.

    “We still need money. We encourage Nigerians to contribute generously. We are almost close to the goal now and every donation is needed for a total eradication,” he said.

    The District Governor of District 9110, Gbemiga Olowu, urged Nigerians to always embrace the polio vaccination.

    “We need everyone to participate in the eradication of polio by bringing their children out for vaccination and by contributing to the polio fund,” Olowu added.

  • Raising the bar of Polio campaign

    Has the fight against polio in Nigeria defied brilliant strategies? I don’t agree. Has the situation gone so wild beyond redemption that we have to accept to live with wild polio virus for the continual destruction of the limbs and lives of our young ones? Never!

    Are there strategies and measures that can make us overcome this monster and free our children from the wrath and fierce indignation of this virus? Yeah; sure. There are methods that we can adopt that those who are not convinced will buy into and have a rethink. This method will arouse our interest and douse the energy of resentments against us. This is what we need to wake our anger and make us defeat polio in Nigeria. Can we eradicate polio by the year 2015? Absolutely possible if we adopt the recommended strategy and take the suitable armour.

    We have spent so much to gain so little. So much energy, so many resources (money included) and regrettably lives have been lost in this struggle and yet little has been achieved. Now, the poser is; why are we here? Why can’t we break this evil chord tying us to this triangular mess and loose our dear country from the comity of Afghanistan and Pakistan? The answer is simple! It is because we don’t want to change strategy. We are addicted to one particular method of campaign; leaders championing the course. This method has proved ineffective in our context as it also failed in many other countries in the past.

    I am not saying that political leaders leading this crusade will always fail. I will be quick to mention former American president, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, FDR. Crippled by polio at age 39, FDR became a staunch anti-polio campaigner. His physical status spoke more than mere words can utter. Little wonder he defeated the multifaceted monster when its rage was fiercest. He stopped the death and crippling of children in their thousands in the United State of America.

    What made him so effective and efficient? He had what the people wanted to see and could as a result spoke convincingly about the evils. He had the requisite credentials for the fight because he wore the shoe and knew where it pinched. Do we now have to pray for another exceptional case of polio attack on a political leader for us to eradicate it in Nigeria? God forbid! There is a way out.

    Recently, Bill Gates, the co-founder of Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation came to Lagos in company of Alhaji Aliko Dangote, the multi-billionaire businessman. They came to pay a courtesy visit to Babatunde R. Fashola SAN, the governor of Lagos State at the State House Ikeja in recognition of his anti-polio activities. These two financial and economic giants have come to join forces to eradicate polio in Nigeria. And they need see another man with political power and national interest, Governor Fashola, for the success of their mission.

    My recent article, Polio Eradication, Matter of Leadership, I did compare Fashola and FDR. What I failed to mention is that no matter how powerful Fashola may be politically, no matter how passionate he may be about eradicating polio because of his love for the children and their future, he can only mobilise men with requisite credentials for the fight. Even the seemingly formidable team of Dangote Foundation and Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation will fall before wild polio virus in Nigeria if requisite human resources are not deployed.

    I had written before and mentioned the benefit of polio survivors leading the fight against polio in my past articles published in national dailies and widely circulated on the internet. When I did, I was not actually emphasising that I must be included. I am only convinced that when they do with all passion, the result will be visible to all. I can testify to this. I had won co-passengers inside bus when I saw them with babies. I have been able to convince many of my neighbours not only to accept our vaccine but also made them advocates of this crusade. India also had Gautam Lewis at the vanguard of this in India, and you know the result today, India is free. Beyond “seeing is believing”, a polio survivor has a story to tell and can tell his or her story with all passion and conviction. And if you love your child, you want to buy his/her story and possibly support the crusade.

    In August 2009, Nigeria witnessed an unprecedented match against polio in the country. That was when we had the National Stakeholders’ Forum on Polio Eradication in Nigeria. This forum, at the instance of Governor Fashola was observed nationally at various dates in that month. In Lagos and many other states, it was on August 8, 2009. This marked significant reduction in the number of cases we have been having annually. But polio is still with us. To make a total riddance of this problem, he has suggested that we raise the bar of polio campaign. Fashola said, “…that is one thing that I wish to work with you (referring to Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation) and the Dangote Foundation to look at how many polio survivors that are here and let them lead the campaign as a physical demonstration of what can and what could have been, in addition, of course, to doing all of the things that we really need to do”.

    This is raising the bar of Polio campaign in Nigeria. Let political differences and ideologies, ethnic sentiments and religious extremism be subdued, if only briefly, for the health of Nigerian children and unanimously take this counsel and appoint polio survivors to lead this crusade while our political leaders and global partners provide the needed support. If we do this, I am very sure; this will be the last stage of the fight. And it will not be long, we will gather, as a people, to celebrate one year in mind of the last polio virus.

    • Olugbenga, a polio survivor and Lagos Polio Ambassador writes from Lagos.

  • Terrorists attack India  embassy in Afghanistan

    Terrorists attack India embassy in Afghanistan

    Insurgents attacked the Indian consulate in Afghanistan’s eastern capital yesterday, killing nine people and reinforcing fears that a bloody regional power struggle will be played out in the country once most foreign troops leave.

    Twenty-three people were wounded when checkpoint guards stopped three attackers in a car as they approached the consulate in Jalalabad city, the office of the governor of Nangarhar province, Gul Agha Sherzai, said in a statement.

    Two attackers leapt from the car and a gunfight broke out, while the third detonated explosives. No Indian officials were killed, though the blast badly damaged a mosque and dozens of homes and small shops nearby.

    India condemned the attack and, without naming any country or group, blamed outside forces.

    “This attack has once again highlighted that the main threat to Afghanistan’s security and stability stems from terrorism and the terror machine that continues to operate from beyond its borders,” the Ministry of External Affairs said in a statement.

    Arch-rivals India and Pakistan have long vied for power and influence in Afghanistan. Many see their struggle intensifying after the departure of most international forces by the end of next year.

    Afghans fear the void left by the NATO-led foreign forces could lead to yet another round of bloody external interference in the impoverished and violence-racked country.

    Afghan President Hamid Karzai is seen as close to India and strongly opposed to the Taliban, who some say is supported by elements of the Pakistani state, in particular its powerful intelligence agency, the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI).

    The Taliban, which spearheads armed opposition to Karzai’s Western-backed government, denied responsibility for Saturday’s attack on the Indian mission close to Pakistan’s border.

    Attacks on the Indian embassy in Kabul – there were two during 2008 and 2009 that together killed more than 50 people – led to accusations by Karzai that Pakistan was attempting to compromise India-Afghanistan relations. He gave no evidence for his assertion, and Pakistan denied it was true.

    Earlier yesterday, India’s Mail Today reported that New Delhi’s ambassador to Kabul was recently warned that the ISI had paid the Haqqani insurgent network – which is allied with the Taliban – to assassinate him.

    “It was a specific alert. A team of security officials was sent to Afghanistan for a security review and it has made some recommendations. Clearly the aim is to pin down our top diplomat so we back off from our work,” a senior official told the daily.

    Indian foreign ministry spokesman Syed Akbaruddin declined to comment on the report, which was sourced to Indian officials who had seen communication intercepts.

    A Pakistani security official dubbed the report “nonsense”. “Why would we do such a thing when we are trying to improve economic ties with India?” he said.

     

  • Five die in Afghan’s chopper crash

    Five Americans from NATO-led foreign forces in Afghanistan have died in a helicopter crash, a United States official says.

    The BBC reports that the crash took place in Daman district of Kandahar province on Monday,

    “Initial reporting indicates there was no enemy activity in the area at the time of the incident,” said the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) in a statement.

    The U.S later confirmed all the dead were Americans, adding that a rainstorm had caused the crash.

    Helicopter crashes have occurred fairly regularly in Afghanistan – either due to accidents or enemy fire.

    11 people – including seven U.S soldiers – died last August when a Black Hawk helicopter crashed, also in southern Afghanistan.

     

  • Mali, not Afghanistan

    Mali, not Afghanistan

    Since the campaign by the French Army to free Northern Mali from the iron grip of the Islamic fundamentalists began a few weeks ago, the Nigerian government has been labouring profusely to justify the entry of its troops into the fray. The Malian government was rendered dysfunctional in March, last year, following a military coup which toppled the government of President Amadou Toumani Toure. Amadou Sanogo, a Captain and leader of the coup, had called for external help to enable the war-weary Malian Army to stop the temerity of the rebels who had taken over a number of key towns in the North of Mali.

    His pleas were ignored. Instead, the African Union, AU, suspended Mali. The AU later struck a deal with the coup leaders to allow President Toure to resign. Part of it was to restore civilian rule which finally saw Dioncounda Traore, the Speaker of the Parliament, sworn in as the Interim President on April 11, 2012. The army thereafter retreated from the North of the country, thereby giving a free reign for a plethora of armed groups to fill the void. These are disparate armed groups all of which have different aims and motivations. They were soon joined by Islamists, many of whom had been displaced from Libya after the fall and eventual death of Muammar Gaddafi in October 2011.

    The Islamist insurgents, who were obviously well-equipped with tested fighters, weapons and free cash, soon overwhelmed other militias and took over the whole of Northern Mali. This started the ‘balkanization’ and bastardization of Mali as various World Heritage Sites, which abound in the rebel-held areas, were systematically desecrated and destroyed. Tied to an Al-Qaeda group in the Maghreb, which in itself, is a franchise of the original Al-Qaeda, the quest of the Islamic fundamentalists was to foist their own brand of stringent Sharia laws on the whole of Mali. Of course, this portends danger for Mali, the entire West African sub-region and the world at large.

    All the AU could do was to engage in mere rhetoric while the extremists dug deeper. By January, this year, the rebels started making preparations to launch a final offensive on the south of the country. This would have brought the entire country under the control of the extremists. This would have also emboldened Al-Qaeda in North Africa to secure a launch pad for the total destruction of the weak governments in Africa, especially West Africa.

    While he held sway as Libyan leader, the late Gaddafi never hid his expansionist agenda which was to control the whole of Africa. He had sold the idea of one United Africa with one President to his other African brothers. When he saw that nobody was ready to buy this, he resorted to buying arms and ammunition which he stockpiled in several locations in the vast desert of Libya.

    With the whole of Libya now turned into one huge warehouse for weapons of mass destruction, Gaddafi planned and executed many sinister plots across the African continent and beyond. He was involved in the wars in Liberia, Cote D’Ivoire, Sierra Leone, Sudan, Somalia, Chad and other troubled spots in Africa. In other parts of the world, he actively sponsored acts of terrorism. One of it was the terrorist attack on the Pan-Am Airline Flight 103, which was brought down over Lockerbie, Scotland, in 1988, killing all the 270 people on board.

    Gaddafi’s ignominious death in 2011 opened a new bastion in terrorists’ war in Africa as all the warehouses harbouring his weapons were left at the vagaries of armed groups which plundered them. Some of them looted the armoury and got additional supplies from Gaddafi’s men who were out to make quick money.

    However, throughout his reign, Gaddafi could not properly penetrate the countries in the northern part of Africa as their economies and governments were stronger than those of the poor countries in West Africa. Charles Taylor, the disgraced former President of Liberia, was a beneficiary of Gaddafi’s poisoned chalice. Another was Blaise Campaore, the pseudo-revolutionary who holds sway in Burkina Faso. Regrettably, both Burkina Faso and Cote D’Ivoire were the routes through which Gaddafi got his weapons across to rebels in Liberia and Sierra Leone during their civil war years. Cote D’Ivoire later paid a price for this by the bloodletting that confronted the country in the recent past.

    Now, poor Mali has come under the jackboots of foreign troops fighting to liberate it from the clutches of Islamic fundamentalists. The French government, its former colonial master, took the lead by dispatching its troops, which stopped the rebels from advancing to the south of the country. Through ceaseless aerial bombardments, they have captured all the rebels’ strongholds. But the French troops will not be available to go all out on any ground assault to totally cleanse the place of the remnants of the rebels who may have taken sanctuary in the desert. Nigeria is at the head of the more than 3,000-strong African forces under the auspices of the Economic Community of West African States, ECOWAS, which have been arriving in Bamako in trickles to undertake the ground offensive.

    Currently, Nigeria is bedeviled by deadly exploits of some extremists believed to have a modicum of ties with the insurgents in Mali. Though the attacks are confined to the northern part of the country, its debilitating effects on the entire country and the West African sub-region is being felt rather than imagined.

    Therefore, the logic of Nigeria’s involvement in Mali is that it is quite easier and cheaper, in terms of human and material resources, to fight terrorism outside the shores of the country than within. In other words, it is far better to confront the growing ‘Al-Qaeda’ influence in Mali and smash it than wait for the insurgency to be exported into the country through the porous borders in the North.

    Furthermore, Mauritania, Libya, Tunisia, Burkina Faso, Niger and Algeria are quite vulnerable to attacks by these rebels. Particularly, Niger and Algeria borders are extremely porous, and neither government has had the effrontery to halt the weapon flow into and through their countries to other parts of West Africa, especially Nigeria. Nigeria shares a vast border with Niger Republic. Besides, the recent terrorists’ attack on a gas plant in Algeria has signaled what to expect in other parts of Africa if preemptive action is not taken to nip the growing insurgency in the continent in the bud.

    But one problem remains. The African troops in the Mali campaign will require enormous assistance from external bodies in terms of training, weapons and other logistics of war. It will be recalled that during the war in Liberia, some of the African troops which were brought into the theatre of war were grossly under-equipped. They had neither boots nor weapons to fight because most of the West African leaders prefer to keep their army ill-equipped to stave off coups against their regimes.

    Another major thing that is worth attention is: what becomes of the rebels who have abandoned their positions in Northern Mali and took to their heels? They are probably locked up in the vast deserts and mountains of Northern Mali where they could instigate guerilla warfare at their whim to destabilize Mali from time to time. They could have also taken refuge somewhere in the Sahel, where they could regroup and carry out their attacks on any part of the West African sub-region. This is why everything must be done to forestall the rise of another Afghanistan in Africa.

    The recent pledge of an initial contribution of $50 million into the estimated $1 billion funds for the war efforts in Mali by AU members in Addis Ababa, underscores the seriousness attached to the Malian crisis by African governments. Therefore, the adventure in Mali is in Nigeria’s interest, the interest of the West African sub-region, Africa and the whole world to deal extremism a decisive blow in order to achieve sustainable peace and progress.

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • UK to host Afghan-Pakistani talks

    UK to host Afghan-Pakistani talks

    British Prime Minister David Cameron will hold key talks with the leaders of Afghanistan and Pakistan to discuss the Afghan peace process, BBC reports.

    The trilateral summit – the third since last summer – is aimed at improving co-operation between both countries to promote regional stability.

    For the first time Afghan and Pakistani army and intelligence chiefs will also take part in the discussions.

    NATO troops are scheduled to withdraw from Afghanistan by the end of 2014.

    In a process initiated by Mr. Cameron last year, Afghan President Hamid Karzai and Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari have agreed to work together on a framework of co-operation following the international troops’ departure next year.

    The steadily approaching deadline for the military exit will inevitably be a key factor in the talks, not least for Pakistan with its concerns about security across the region from then on, the report adds.

    Mr. Cameron will host a dinner with Mr. Karzai and Mr. Zardari at his official country residence Chequers north of London on Sunday evening.

    He will then hold the in-depth talks with both presidents and their key officials on Monday.

    “This trilateral process sends a very clear message to the Taliban: now is the time for everyone to participate in a peaceful political process in Afghanistan,” Downing Street said in a statement.

     

  • Troops rescue U.S doctor in Afghanistan

    An American doctor who had been abducted by the Taliban in eastern Afghanistan has been rescued, the United States-led international forces say.

    Dilip Joseph, of the Morning Star Development aid group, was freed by U.S and Afghan forces in a joint operation that killed seven of his captors, The BBC reports.

    U.S commander in Afghanistan, Gen. John Allen, said he ordered the mission as intelligence showed the doctor was in danger of being killed or injured.

    He is said to be in good health.

    The BBC says Dr. Joseph will undergo medical checks before returning to the U.S – probably in a few days.

    Dr. Joseph and two Afghan colleagues from Morning Star were captured by Taliban insurgents on December 5 while returning from a rural medical clinic in the Sarobi district of Kabul province, near the Afghan capital.

    Morning Star said the three were stopped and captured while driving by a group of armed men.

    They were then taken to a mountainous area about 80km (50 miles) from the Pakistan border.

    The two Afghans were released on Saturday evening following three days of negotiations.

    In a statement Morning Star said it was “grateful beyond words for the assistance and support of many people and organisations during this event.”

    It also said it had “paid no ransom, money or other consideration to the captors or anyone else to secure the release of hostages.”

    Gen. Allen praised the military cooperation between U.S and Afghan forces which led to Dr. Joseph’s release.