Tag: annually

  • 800,000 people commit suicide annually, says WHO

    No fewer than 800,000 people commit suicide annually, the World Health Organisation (WHO), has said.

    The world body identified suicide as the second leading cause of death among people between the ages of 15 and 29 in 2016.

    It made the disclosure yesterday in a statement to mark the World Suicide Prevention Day.

    The global health agency said the common methods of suicide were hanging and firearms occurring in all countries and regions, whether rich or poor.

    It added, however, that most occurred in low and middle-income countries, which accounted almost four-fifths of global suicides in 2016.

    “In high-income countries, there is a well-established link between suicide and mental health issues such as depression and alcohol use disorders. But many suicides take place on an impulse during moments of crisis.”

    The UN health agencies estimated that a person died every 40 seconds by suicide and up to 25 times as many make a suicide attempt.

    To prevent suicides in communities, WHO and the Mental Health Commission of Canada released a toolkit.

    The toolkit outlined ways to prevent this serious public health problem, one of which is knowledge of the most commonly used methods, and restrictions of access to these methods.

    Other examples included policies to limit alcohol and drug abuse, effective mental health care, and follow-up care for attempted suicide cases.

    It estimated that the method used for 20 per cent of global suicides was pesticide self-poisoning, most of which occurred in rural agricultural areas in low- and middle-income countries.

    WHO explained that as well as the health sector, many sectors of society needed to be involved in preventing suicide, including education, labour, agriculture and the media.

    It said: “These actors all need to work together if they are to have an impact on this complex issue. People commit suicide at all times of their lives, and each one is a tragedy that affects families, communities and entire countries, and leaves behind long-lasting effects.”

    In many countries, suicide remained a taboo subject, WHO said, adding that this could prevent those who had attempted suicide from getting the help they needed.

    To date, only a few countries had included suicide prevention among their health priorities and only 38 countries have a national suicide prevention strategy, WHO said.

    World Suicide Prevention Day is an awareness day observed on September 10 every year to provide worldwide commitment and action to prevent suicides with various activities around the world since 2003.

  • ‘1,000 die annually of epidemics’

    No fewer than 1,000 Nigerians die annually as a result of epidemics, a public health expert, Prof. Akin Osibogun, said in Lagos.

    Osibogun, a former Chief Medical Director (CMD) of LUTH, Lagos, said this at the 8th annual symposium of the Health Writers’ Association of Nigeria (HEWAN).

    The symposium’s theme was “Emergency Response to Disease Outbreaks: The Way Forward in Nigeria’’.

    He said the deaths were due to the leadership’s lack of political will and preparedness to combat epidemics in the country.

    Osibogun also said that it was unfortunate that Nigeria was still unprepared should the Ebola Virus Disease resurface in the country.

    “Unfortunately, I will say no, Nigeria is still not prepared if Ebola Virus Disease resurfaces in the country again.

    “In 2014, the Federal Government promised to establish six functional laboratories but nothing of such is yet to be set up.

    “Yes, the government has done well with the establishment of the National Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) but there is yet to be a law in place to back up that centre and strengthen its operations.

    “Also, we do not have a national plan of action yet so we can be well prepared for any form of disease outbreak, “ he said.

    Osibogun said it was far cheaper to be prepared than to combat disease outbreaks.

    He said that a strong health system was better and will be able to prevent disease epidemics and respond faster to save lives.

    “’Political commitment is highly required to make adequate funds available to provide needed infrastructure such as laboratories for prompt diagnosis, researches, treatment centres and medical equipment.

    “There should be constant training and retraining of medical personnel for emergency preparedness .

    “There must be strong collaboration between the Federal and State governments and other health agencies to how to contain outbreaks.

    “’So, as a nation we need to anticipate epidemics and be well prepared via surveillance system, investigation control measures, implementation of prevention measures as well as continuous monitoring, “ he said.

    Lagos State House of Assembly Chairman, House Committee on Health, Olusegun Olulade, said the issue of health was a collective project that should not be left alone in the hands of government.

  • ‘Nigeria can raise over N21trillion from taxes annually’

    Omoba Olumuyiwa Sosanya, founding President of the Association of National Accountants of Nigeria (ANAN) has described as misplaced the federal government’s penchant for taking loans to boost the budget, saying it smacks of poor economic management on the part of the government.

    Speaking in an interview with The Nation, the accounting guru said the easiest way the government can raise money without resort to borrowing is through tax reforms.

    The federal government, he said, can generate over N21trillion through taxes.

    Specifically, he said, “This is where the N21trillion comes from. The federal government through the company income tax can generate N3.6trillion. For withholding tax, it’s N3.3trillion. Stamp duty is about N500billion. Pay as you Earn (PAYE) which is for the Armed Forces and other agencies. Now the value added tax VAT that will accrue to the federal government will be N1.6trillion out of the N8trillion that is being generated nationally. The independently generated revenue by the parastatals is about N8trillion. So that would give you N21trillion. So the government can budget N21 trillion without borrowing money. And our calculation now is as far back as 2013. So if we are talking about now we are talking about N24/25trillion and the revenue from VAT will now be about N10/11trillion. So we don’t have any reason to borrow money if we put our tax system in order and my emphasis is decentralisation. It’s part of our restructuring. We have to reform taxation and start from VAT.”

    Expatiating, he said, “If we must move forward and put revenue generation from oil as secondary if not the third sector, this is the right time for us if we are talking about diversification to allow each of the states to administer the VAT. And the starting point is that they would be able to register all businesses in their domain and they would administer and collect the VAT.

    “So we must decentralise the administration of VAT and allow the states to administer it. But the money will go into a pool and then it will be distributed. But we have a difficulty and the difficulty is that the VAT is now part of our constitution and for this decentralisation to happen, it means the constitution has to be amended. But that would take heaven knows when,” he reiterated.

    • (Full interview on pages 46-47)

     

  • Nigeria loses over N300bn annually to overseas training

    Nigeria loses over N300bn annually to overseas training

    Nigeria is losing over $1billion (about N300bn) in foreign exchange to overseas training annually, the Director-General, Centre for Management Development (CMD), Dr Kabir Kabo Usman has said.

    The CMD is the nation’s foremost human resources management outfits created by the federal government under Act No 51 of 1976.

    Usman who spoke in an interview with our correspondent in Abuja at the weekend disclosed that the federal government spends millions of dollars on training and capacity building of her personnel in various foreign countries on a yearly basis.

    The CMD boss, who lamented the extent of capital flight as a result of this development, blamed it on what he described as ‘financial indiscipline’ among certain administrators in the government circle who are insensitive to the danger this act poses to economic development, especially, at a time when everyone is calling on the government to revive the nation’s ailing economy.

    The CMD, he stressed, feels concerned that Nigeria had annually been wasting more than $1billion on overseas training that is obtainable in the country while a fraction of such training expenditure for government officials can easily generate 100, 000 new jobs at home

    “We had about 500, 000 Nigerians going for one type of overseas training or the other annually; even if we only spent about ten thousand dollars on each one of only 100, 000 of them, we are talking about $1billion.

    “If you convert that to Naira even at a lower rate of N300 to a dollar, it tells you that we were spending at least N300 billion.

    “If we have only one per cent of the local content of training being domesticated, we will save at least one billion naira and you can imagine the kind of jobs, about 100, 000 jobs that we can create in this country,” he asserted.

    Thankfully, the Kano-based technocrat said the CMD have equipped its staff to the extent that they can deliver most of these capacity-building trainings people go for abroad.

    “We have sharpened the skills and competencies of our staff by exposing them to various international trainings. What is left is for us to cascade what we have acquired to the grassroots for higher productivity. In the same vein, in 2015 alone, CMD trained over 2000 personnel from both the public and private sectors on capacity-building programmes,” Usman stressed.

  • Osun to save N8.2b annually through Opon Imo

    Osun to save N8.2b annually through Opon Imo

    The Osun State Government will be saving N8.2 billion annually through the distribution of the Opon Imo (Tablet of Knowledge) to pupils.

    Instead of spending the fund on the purchase of books, the government will spend only about N200 million on Opon Imo.

    Governor Rauf Aregbesola made this known yesterday while distributing educational materials worth N30 million to scools at the multi-purpose hall of the Local Government Service Commission.

    The materials include 10,000 daily attendance registers, 11,600 school record diaries, 150,000 continuous assessment report cards for Junior Secondary Schools and 145,000 continuous assessment report cards for Senior Secondary Schools.

    Others are 7,000 white chalks, 70,000 cumulative record folders, 7,000 chalk board renovators and 30,000 chalk board dusters.

    The governor said with the downloading of 56 textbooks on 17 subjects into the Opon Imo, pupils only have to carry a digital device about, adding that this makes learning easier.

    Instead of being criticised for spending N200 million on Opon Imo, he said his administration should be praised for the initiative.

    He said about 150,000 tablets are to be distributed to pupils across the state.

    Aregbesola said his administration is investing huge funds in education to instil a minimum level of value in every public school pupil.

    He said: “Were we to buy 56 textbooks for 17 subjects offered in Senior Secondary Schools for 150,000 pupils. Over N8.4 billion would have been spent annually as against the N200 million expended on Opon Imo.

    “Instead of being praised for God’s endowed ingenuity and wisdom, which gave birth to the Opon Imo initiative, some people prefer to demonstrate their ignorance. They are grandstanding and claiming what they are not.”

    The governor described the score card of the last administration in the education sector in its 90 months in office as a far cry from his administration’s achievements in 27 months.

    He warned teachers against sharp practices in the distribution and utilisation of the materials and urged parents to monitor their children.

  • ‘Ekiti loses N757m annually to ghost workers’

    ‘Ekiti loses N757m annually to ghost workers’

    The Ekiti State Government has been losing N757 million to ghost workers in the 16 local government areas, according to findings from the audit of local government workers.

    Commissioner for Information and Civic Orientation Mr. Funminiyi Afuye spoke yesterday during a programme on ADABA 88.9 FM in Ado-Ekiti.

    Afuye said 1,323 of the 19,258 council workers were ghost workers.

    He said the initial biometric verification gave a figure of 19,212 workers while the last revealed 17,889 workers.

    Afuye said the salary of the 1,323 ghost workers cost the government over N63 million monthly and N757 million annually.

    He said the N757 million would now be spent on projects.

    Afuye urged the striking council workers to accept the government’s peace overtures and resume work.

    He said the Governor Kayode Fayemi administrations has no intention of sacking any worker and would pay the minimum wage as soon as their bank accounts were verified.

    The commissioner said 1,756 council workers with certificates would be deployed in schools and 4,669 council health workers would be deployed in the Primary Health Care Development Agency (PHCDA).

    He said the staff audit was not meant to witch-hunt any worker, but to restore efficiency, probity, accountability and transparency and reduce redundancy.

    Afuye said: “The governor has reiterated that it has no plan to sack anybody. We have discovered disparity in the number of staff on the government’s payroll in the local governments. The government is going to pay the arrears of the minimum wage, but all these issues have to be resolved first.

    “Ekiti State has limited resources, which must be used for the welfare of the ordinary man. Since we have completed the biometric exercise, we urge local government workers to go back to work and ensure proper verification of their account details.

    “We urge them to go back to work and collect their salaries while we continue negotiations.”