Tag: Agency

  • Oyo to get residents’ registration agency

    The Oyo State government has submitted a bill to the House of Assembly to establish an agency that will register and manage residents’ data.

    Speaker Michael Adeyemo broke the news to The Nation in Ibadan the state capital.

    Adeyemo said the bill was on the second stage of consideration, indicating that it will most likely scale through all legislation hurdles.

    The lawmaker said the agency would be responsible for registering residents across the state, adding that it would update the data and manage it for planning purposes.

    He said: “There is a bill that is currently at the second reading stage in the House. It will address the issue of having Oyo State Resident Registration Agency in such a way that we will have an agency that will take care of the registration of all residents for the purpose of planning, expansion and development of facilities across the state.

    “The data will also be useful for security because we must know who and who are residents of the state. So, the government is thinking along that line. I can assure you that the Assembly is going to speed up the work on it and pass the bill into law. I believe the agency will be set up. I think the registration will begin as soon as possible.”

    The project may lead to the introduction of residents’ identification cards, which will also help the government to plan social welfare services and projects across the state.

     

  • Kaduna traffic agency sacks 124 marshals

    The Kaduna State Traffic Law Enforcement Authority (KASTELEA) has sacked 124 marshals for various misconducts, it was learnt yesterday.

    The General Manager, Abdulkadir Ahmed, in a statement at the weekend, said some of the marshals were found wanting for extortion, while others absconded from their duty posts.

    “Of the 124 marshals, one was dismissed for extortion, another one for gross misconduct, while 122 others were relieved of their appointments for absconding from their duty posts,” he said.

    Ahmed said the termination of the appointments followed all laid down procedures, as prescribed in the Terms and Condition of Service (TACOS) of the authority.

    According to him, the move was part of the agency’s effort at repositioning the agency. “The management has given the sacked marshals two weeks to return all KASTELEA property in their possession, failure of which will attract severe sanctions,” the statement added.

  • Lagos ’ll be AIDS-free in 2030, says agency

    The Lagos State AIDS Control Agency (LSACA) is set to make the state AIDS free by 2030.

    According to the agency,  there will be no case of the disease in the state by then and anybody living with HIV will not be able to transmit same.

    This assurance came in the spirit of the celebration the golden jubilee of the creation of Lagos State.

    According to LSACA’s Chief Executive  Officer (CEO), Dr Oluseyi Temowo, the agency was celebrating its achievements and the successful passage of HIV discrimination and stigmatisation law in the state, which invariably allowed people living with the virus to seek treatment unashamedly.

    Temowo said: “The rate and prevalence of HIV has reduced in the state, it dropped from 4.1 in 2014 to a current survey of most at risk- transporters, cyclists and tri-cyclists of less than four per cent. The road map for 2030 is to abide by the 90-90-90 initiative.

    “A global initiative from United AIDS that all nations, governments to re-educate people on HIV/AIDS, so that it can be eradicated by 2030. 90 per cent of everybody living with HIV/AIDS must know their status. Of this 90 per cent must be getting drugs, of this 90 per cent must have viral suppression, so that it will not infect anybody again.”

    “So if you are positive, and you are using your drugs the viral load will come down and won’t infect your wife. That is the vision for 20:20, which will launch us into 2030. The governor has given us the fund to start this campaign, especially in hard to reach areas of the state. Mother-to-child transmission is part of it. We are looking forward to an AIDS free generation. That a mother is positive does not mean her child should. We are carrying traditional birth attendants along, so that they can do a quick referral to the hospital of any positive patient, which will afford us to take positive action on the patient and proper monitoring.

    “The governor is the chairman of the agency. He listens and takes action on anything on HIV and AIDS so we are good to go on any step to curtail HIV spread in the state,” explained Temowo.

    He said part of the way forward was the stakeholders’ meeting with the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) in order to best increase Human Immune Virus (HIV) testing among Lagos State residents as one of the measures to control the spread of the virus.

    Evans Enwefah, convener of HIV Counselling and Testing Services, LSACA, said the agency with the USAID is providing massive medical personnel for testing and counseling in all health centres to eradicate HIV.

    “There is the need for people to be encouraged and go out en-mass for HIV test so as to ensure that Lagos State is free from HIV/AIDS. I will encourage all expectant women in the state to go for HIV test which is the first direction to eradicate HIV positive babies being born in Lagos, irrespective of the HIV status of their parents. Lagos State Aid Control Agency is celebrating Lagos State at 50 years by letting the world know the effort the state has made to reduce HIV and how gradually we are winning the war against HIV in state,” he said.

    Ebenezer Omejalile of IEC-BCCWORKGROUP convener, also appreciated the Lagos State governor, the Agency and its partners for their efforts to make Lagos HIV free state and pleaded with people to stop stigmatising  those living with HIV, stressing that they can also live a normal life.

    The agency stressed the need for more free HIV testing services in the state while also commending free health outreaches organised by the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) and the Four Square Church in Yaba market, Tejuosho and Ilasamaja, Oshodi-Isolo.

    Temowo said the agency would further engage an audience assessment exercise to measure the influence of the campaign and the perception of Lagosians towards the campaign. This, in turn, would solve the challenge of assessing the success of the campaign.

    “LSACA has experienced difficulty in assessing reports. Last month, LSACA commenced jingles in LAGBUS and T and M buses plying CMS-Ajah and some other routes, commuters are encouraged on listening and giving feedbacks to the agency,’’ he said.

  • ‘HELP, we’re wasting away’

    ‘HELP, we’re wasting away’

    • Stranded Rivers State medical students on scholarship abroad cry out.

    About 159 final Year Rivers State students are stranded overseas with no certificates and accommodation as a result of the nonpayment of their tuition fees by the Nyesom Wike-led Rivers State government. Among them are dejected medical students whose hope of becoming medical doctors has been placed on edge.

    I have been stopped from taking exams. I was not allowed into the hospital to see patients. I ought to have completed studies since last year but I am stranded here because the school cannot issue me a certificate.

    FLORENCE  TAMUNO, an indigene of Ogu/Bolo Local Government Area in Rivers State has been stopped from attending clinical rotations since September last year. The 26-year-old medical student of All Saints University, St. Vincent Grenadines is presently stranded in the Caribbean with no accommodation and food to eat. Her hope of graduating as a medical doctor has been cut short since she has been denied a certificate of graduation owing to a staggering tuition debt of USD 39,975.00. This is exclusive of hostel fees and living allowance.

    Tamuno, who got a scholarship under the Rivers State Sustainable Development Agency (RSSD) in 2013 after completing a degree in Physiology from a UK university, has not received study allowance from the Rivers State government since December 2014.

    “I have been stopped from taking exams. I was not allowed into the hospital to see patients. I ought to have completed studies since last year but I am stranded here because the school cannot issue me a certificate,” she told The Nation in a wearied voice over the phone.

    There are about 16 RSSDA sponsored final year medical students stranded at the All Saints University, St. Vincent Grenadines. This number does not include other final years students in fields such as engineering, Law, Science, ICT, etc scattered in various schools in India, Europe, Canada, UK and the Caribbean.

    After winning the governorship election in 2015, Governor Nyesom Wike withdrew about 350 Rivers State students from various universities abroad, citing economic challenges for his action.

    However, the governor promised to keep final year students and pay their tuitions in order to enable them complete their studies and earn a certificate.  It was learned that the Wike-led government followed up its promise to cater for the final year students by writing to their various schools to plead for more time for the new administration to take shape before payments will be issued out. After the time elapsed, the government wrote again for another three months which also elapsed and the total waiting time has now culminated in a period of two years and some months. The final year RSSDA scholars, inclusive of the medical students, have not been paid any living allowance, leaving them as victims of eviction in their various hostels.

    One of the medical students, a female who is presently stranded at the University of East Anglia, Norwich, who pleaded not to be named, told The Nation that she has had to engage in illegal activities to earn a living in the UK. Also, her medical tuition fees for two years stand at 26, 000 pounds, while 18 months accommodation and upkeep stand at 15,300 pounds. She confessed that the nonpayment of living allowance which ought to be catered for by the scholarship has led her into exceeding the legally authorised 20 working hours per term. She also had to contend with running night shifts from 7.00pm-7.45 am Mondays- Fridays, a dire situation which leaves her stressed and tired for lectures.

    I wasn’t cleared for graduation since my fees are outstanding.  I can’t apply for a job because I don’t have a certificate.  I can’t even compete for little jobs which I am more than qualified for as a British College graduate. Sometimes I just ask myself, is this a blessing or a curse? We are here wasting away, while our mates have gone up to do higher things – she lamented, breaking into sobs intermittently.

    With their dreams of wearing a ward coat and a stethoscope hung on their neck fast disappearing, it did not come as a surprise that many of them have been left dejected and depressed. The inability to pay their outstanding fees in their various institutions also means that they cannot return to Nigeria to partake in the National Youths Services Corps programme. They are also at a crossroads because they have not been issued a return ticket to come back home, leaving them abandoned without care.

    ‘Rivers State has abandoned us’

    Another medical doctor in waiting who simply identified himself as Promise told The Nation that the RSSD scholarship is a full sponsorship in which the government pays for tuition, accommodation and a living allowance. Also, a return ticket is issued at the end of the programme to enable them to return home to contribute to the development of the state and the nation as a whole.

    “Before now, the government paid our fees in advance, so when the issue of late payment started, the school sent an invoice but the government wrote back promising to pay later. So we were allowed to continue with clinical rotations. We were finally stopped three months to our graduation. Two years and four months ago was the last time we got anything from the government. We have written series of letters to the governor, commissioners and the RSSD agency. They keep promising but nothing has been done. Most of us don’t have a place to stay. The current economic situation in Nigeria is not helping matters because when they send you money and you convert it, it won’t be able to buy you anything.

    “We are even forced to ask, if things are like this, please send us return ticket. Let us return to Nigeria and start something with our lives. The only person we hear from is the Executive Director of the agency and all he says to us is ‘sooner than later,’ which has not translated to anything in the last two years,” Promise lamented.

    A long, winding promise

    Although the students have kept in touch with the agency, it had yet to translate to alleviating their plight since promises made have not been fulfilled. Amadi Ugochukwu, a final year medical doctor in the Caribbean, disclosed that himself and other affected students have been in dire straits owing to the terrible living conditions and humiliation they have to bear as a result of nonpayment of their tuition and living allowance by the Rivers State government.

    “The situation is not just restricted to RSSDA sponsored students in the Caribbean. Scholars in Canada, UK, Hungary, Russia and other countries where students are stranded also face the same fate as a result of the neglect by the government of Rivers State. We simply plead with them to expedite action on our plight so we can live like saner human beings again.”

    Political undertones

    Could it be that stranded Rivers State scholars are victims of circumstance used to settle election scores? A statement by another stranded student in Hungary, who also pleaded anonymity, may have confirmed this assertion.

    We are a set of students sent by the Rivers State government to study medicine and surgery under the previous administration of Rotimi Amaechi. Everything was on track and our studies were not hindered prior to this 2015 election. Things started changing when the APC lost the election and our present governor was sworn in. The process of governance which is supposed to be a continuum was hampered by the present administration.

    “The present governor promised that all those in the final year would be sponsored to finish their programme, while those who do not fall into this category would be brought back to Nigeria to continue. Names were compiled with authorisation from different schools all over the world but to our greatest surprise, from 2015 till this day, making it two years and four months, our fees and upkeep have not been paid for the same time frame. We have been stranded and kept incommunicado. We have even asked for our return ticket but to no avail. This is a case of adoption and abandonment by the Rivers State government. In saner climes, it is a criminal offence but this is Nigeria and anything goes. We are pleading with Governor Wike to come to our aid.  As a former minister of state for education, we hope he better understands our plight.

    The Executive Director of RSSDA, Mr Larry Pepple, in a phone conversation with The Nation, explained the delay in payment of the final year scholars allowances, saying Rivers State government is not shielded from the challenge of the economy.

    “You know that the mainstay of the nation’s economy used to be derived exclusively from oil. So the fall in oil and the spiral of naira nose diving and dollar taking a shot to the heavens is affecting the funding of everything particularly scholarships abroad.

    “River State government is trying as much as it can to pay the fees. We have some financial approvals but they have not metamorphosed to physical cash, which we hope and pray it will happen very soon. We are in touch daily with the students and they understand this situation and very soon, not too long from now, this will be over”.

    An attempt was made to speak with the Secretary to the State Government (SSG) of Rivers State, Mr Kenneth Kobani, but calls made to his phone were unanswered. The SSG also failed to respond to text messages sent to his phone.

    It would be noted that the RSSDA scholarship for Rivers State indigenes commenced in the 2008/2009 academic session with the target to send 300 students overseas annually. One of the reasons why the state put up the scholarship scheme was to curb deprivation in employment opportunities to the Rivers people by multinational companies who source for their manpower from outside the state, on the excuse that the state lacks requisite manpower for the sector within their grasp. The scholarship scheme also hopes to position Rivers youths to play a significant role in the international and global economy through exposure to modern learning in a very conducive atmosphere.

  • AIDS agency screens 166 motorcyclists in Badagry

    In support of Lagos at 50 celebrations, the Lagos State AIDS Control Agency (LSACA) has counseled and tested 166 motorcyclists(okada riders) in Badagry Local Government Area of the state to curb the spread of HIV virus. Earlier on,  the agency had carried out a similar programme in Ikorodu and Epe Local Government areas.

    Sensitising the motorcyclists  on the basic facts of HIV/AIDS and stigmatisation, the health educator of the agency, Mrs. Olushola Adebambo, said the virus could be transmitted through unprotected sexual intercourse with an infected person, sharing of sharp objects with infected person, transfusion of an unscreened infected blood to uninfected person and from an infected mother to her unborn baby during pregnancy, childbirth or after birth during breastfeeding.

    She added that HIV could not be transmitted through sharing of clothes, dishes, toilet, seats, hugging, shaking of hands, touching or being near to an infected person and through eating together.

    Appreciating the efforts of the Lagos State government was the Chairman of Badagry Central (Branch B of NNAMORAL), Mr. Michael Hoteyin, for conducting free HIV Counseling and Testing (HCT) for the Nagari Nakowa Motorcycle Owners and Riders Association of Lagos State (NNAMORAL). He said majority of the motorcycle riders who were ignorant of their HIV status had been tested and received results immediately. He, therefore, urged all members to access free HIV counseling and testing to know their status in order to limit the spread of HIV/AIDS in Lagos State.

     

  • NUPENG to Fed Govt: create agency to protect pipelines

    NUPENG to Fed Govt: create agency to protect pipelines

    The Nigeria Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers (NUPENG) has appealed to the Federal Government to create a Pipeline Protection Agency (PPA) that will be saddled with the protection of pipelines.

    Its President, Comrade Igwe Achese, gave the advice in Lagos, saying the agency should be well funded and equipped with modern gadgets like alarms, sensors and helicopters and gunships with night vision.

    Commending the Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) for re-opening Mosimi Depot, NUPENG said the development would make distribution of petroleum products to the South- west easy and reduce the pressure on petroleum tankers that throng the Lagos axis to load.

    He urged the NNPC to also re-open the  System B line so that petroleum products could be dispensed through that line.

    According to him, the NNPC should go further to reactivate and re-open other moribund depots in  the county.

    Achese lauded the corporation’s management under Dr. Maikanti Baru for the increase in refining capacity of the four refineries by 29 per cent.

    He added that the new model of each refinery purchasing crude oil at export parity price, processing and selling the products on its own account was in order.

  • Agency plans waste  management campaign

    Agency plans waste management campaign

    Delta State Capital Territory Development Agency (DSCTDA) is planning to embark on a door-to-door waste management sensitisation programme in Asaba.
    Head of Environment and Water Mr. Isaac Nwosu told News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Asaba the programme was part of measures to curtail the effect of flood in Asaba and in line with the agency’s mandate to ensure good environment.
    He said DSCTDA was aware that one of the ways to check flood was good waste management, adding that poor handling of waste by people was a challenge.
    “We have come to realise that the attitude of indiscriminate disposal of waste is something embedded in the psyche of the people.
    “As an agency saddled with the responsibility of managing the capital, we have concluded plans to launch a public sensitisation and effective door-to-door sensitisation of residents on waste management.
    “The essence is for residents to understand the menace of indiscriminate dumping of waste and the health hazard it poses.
    “We will ensure sanitation laws are enforced to achieve a change of attitude, with people complying with the principles of managing waste,’’ Nwosu said.
    He said the government made available waste bins in Asaba, covering 50 per cent of the cost price.
    “It is an offence not to own waste bins and non-payment of waste bill. Once enforcement of these laws begins, indiscriminate dumping of refuse and waste will be reduced in Asaba.’’

  • Agency advises Kano on pigeon pea production

    Agency advises Kano on pigeon pea production

    The Coordinating Director, Nigerian Agricultural Quarantine Service, (NAQS), Dr. Vincent Isegbe, has advised the Kano State government to look at the potential of initiating its farmers into a planned pigeon pea production programme.

    “Kano farmers can be enabled to key into the $100billion pigeon pea Indian export deal recently negotiated with the Nigeria government,” Isegbe said.

    Speaking during a visit to Governor Abdullahi Umar Ganduje at the Aminu Kano Lodge, Asokoro, Abuja, the director described pigeon pea as an emerging export commodity which should not be ignored by states with huge agricultural potential, such as Kano.

    He stressed the need to reposition the Mallam Aminu Kano International Airport  to expedite the export of agricultural commodities, promising that his agency would do all in its powers to help farmers attain international standard in the commodity yield.

    The director suggested that the Kano state government can opt to serve as the buyer of the produce so at to have a leverage to better negotiate and coordinate its export.

    Ganduje expressed appreciation to the agency for the recognition, promising to work out the details of the discussion with the Ministry of Agriculture.

    The governor thanked the team for seeking to strengthen agro production to meet the international market standard.

    A major highlight of the meeting was the presentation of NAQS Outstanding Achievement Award to Ganduje in recognition of his contribution in agro-production for export trade, in line with Federal Government’s economic diversification agenda.

  • Agency praises Ooni for support

    The director of the National Images Agricultural Empowerment Training Scheme Project, Mr. Oluwaseyi Bamigbade, has hailed the Ooni of Ife, Oba Adeyeye Enitan Ogunwusi, for his support in empowering Nigerians.

    He described monarch as a lover of peace, unity, transformation and progress.

    Bamigbade spoke after he presented a proposal to the monarch that would enable the organisation train young school leavers and graduates in Osun State and other Southwest states.

    According to him, the training would lead to employment generation, economic empowerment and self- sufficiency.

    The programme, he said, aimed to train over two million less-privileged young school leavers and graduates in basic agricultural skills that would enable them have adequate knowledge on rice production, wheat, cassava, fish farming, vegetable, birds, among others, and promote export and tourism.

    He said it would also allow them to become self-reliant and form a cooperative society that would make them access credit from reputable financial institutions.

    The scheme is being supported by the Small and Medium Enterprises Development Agency (SMEDAN); FADAMA, Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises and the Federal Institute of Industrial Research (FIIRO), Oshodi.

     

  • Agency arraigns 650 offenders

    Six hundred and fifty violators of Anambra State signage law were prosecuted between July and December, Anambra Signage and Advertisement Agency (ANSAA) has said.

    The Managing Director, Mr. Jude Emecheta, told News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Awka 400 of the offenders were arraigned in Awka, while 250 were docked in Onitsha.

    He said 342 other offenders settled out of court and paid their bills, while 168 were issued bench warrants for non-appearance in court.

    Emecheta lamented that big firms, including multinationals, were fond of evading payment for signage and advertisement fees.

    He said the agency recovered millions of naira from the evaders, adding that efforts were made to ensure business concerns paid signage and advertisement fees.

    “Before now, companies evaded signage and advertisement fees, but with the agency’s introduction of prosecution of offenders, the story has changed.

    “The agency recovered millions of naira from these companies, while some of them, who were summoned, choose to pay even before going to court.

    “But some of them are bent on not performing their statutory duties. We will go after them.

    “In Onitsha, people were surprised because that was the first time such a measure was adopted to enforce payment. It brought mixed feelings, but yielded a positive result,” he said.

    Emecheta said the agency would not relent in the new approach to realise more revenue and surpass last year’s success.