Tag: Bayelsa community

  • NACA’s free medical mission raises hope in Bayelsa community

    Nobody wants to die. The reality of this statement played out recently at Otuokpoti, a neighbouring community to Otuoke, the hometown of President Goodluck Jonathan in Ogbia Local Government Area, Bayelsa State.

    En masse the curious and excited people of the area trooped out to partake in a free medical exercise organised for them by the National Agency for the Control of AIDS (NACA) in collaboration with the Office of the Senior Assistant to the President on Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).

    The young, the old and the elderly came with deluge of health complaints. They kept a team of health experts selected by the organisers of the programme busy for the four days the humanitarian event lasted. The people especially the indigent viewed it as an opportunity to alleviate their pains and get solutions to ailments they could not afford money to deal with.

    It was also an opportunity for them to know their HIV statuses. So, after registering at an area mapped out as the Outpatient Department (OPD) and checking their blood sugar level, the people moved to the HIV Testing and Counseling (HTC). Then, they besieged the Body Mass Index (BDM) department where the health experts examined their heights, hips and waists to determine cases of hypertension.

    At the end, they were referred to the doctors in the consulting room who prescribed drugs for them and directed them to the pharmacy. The flow, an imitation of a typical medical clinic, was deliberately put together by the organisers to ensure proper coordination of the programme.

    Speaking to Niger Delta Report, the Director of Programme and Chief Executive Officer, New Horizons Aids and Development Initiative (NHADI), Mrs Ebi Owoubiri commended the people for coming out en masse. She said a town crier went round the community to announce the benefits of participating in the exercise and to mobilise the people.

    She explained that four nurses, four laboratory scientists, two pharmacist and 10 medical doctors were hired to attend to the health challenges of the people.

    He said: “This free medical outreach put together by NACA and the MDGs’ office is designed to reach people with health challenges. I am impressed with the turnout because before now, we sent out town criers to go round the community and mobilise the people.

    “We have established a process to enable everybody get properly checked before receiving medication. Everybody must pass through this process, you are not expected to bypass any one.”

    Also, the Assistant Director Programme, Dr. Sebastine Wakdok, said NACA and the MDGs office acquired enough drugs to make the programme a success. He said medical mission was primarily designed to enable people know their HIV statuses and treat common ailments like diabetic and hypertension.

    He said one local government area from each if the 36 states would benefit from the medical outreach. According to him persons with exceptional medical cases would be referred to the Federal Medical Centre (FMC) for treatment.

    “It is medical outreach aimed at counseling and addressing health challenges in communities. it is aimed at treating malaria, diagnosis of hypertension and referrals to appropriate health services. We are using Ogbia as the pilot local government area”, he said.

    In fact, the beneficiaries of the programme could not hide their feelings. They poured encomiums on the organisers of the event. For instance, the Community Development Committee Chairman, Mr. Jackson Roman , described it as the first of its kind.

    “I feel very happy because this is the first time such thing is happening in our community. I tried my best to sensitise the people through town criers. Immediately l hot a hint that they were coming”, he said.

    One of the patients, Mr. Francis Arumuna, described it as the best medical exercise he had witnessed all his life.

    He said: “I appreciate it. The system is commendable and I thank God that this good thing came to our village. I received free drugs. The previous ones l witnessed demanded money from us and sold their drugs to us. This is the first of its kind”.

    But to one of the patients, who identified herself as Suan Okuperi said the government should sustain such interventions to help in addressing rising cases of sick people in communities.”

  • Erosion threatens Bayelsa community

    Erosion threatens Bayelsa community

    Residents of Okpoama, an oil-rich kingdom in Bayelsa State, have cried out over the ravages of erosion.

    It is not the conventional kind. Located by the sea shore, salty waves constantly pound the coastline, washing land away. The people fear that, if not checked, their kingdom will disappear eventually.

    Their concerns are coming as the entire community warms up for the coronation of King Ebitimi Emmanuel Banigo, the Amayanabo of Okpoama Kingdom, Okpo XXI, in October.

    “Erosion has taken a major part of our town; our land has vanished; you know this is the last part of Nigeria,” Chief Emmanuel Beredugo-Elei, Secretary, Okpoama Council of Chiefs, said while taking journalists round parts of the eroded kingdom.

    Chief Beredugo called on the Federal Government to come to the community’s aid by building shoreline embankment in addition to sand-filling the affected areas.

    He noted that the remedy has become necessary considering the coming of the Liquefied Natural Gas project to the kingdom.

    “The Federal Government should embark on shore protection and sand-filling to reclaim and get more land as most of our land has vanished, especially now that the LNG and other multinational companies are going to be here,” he said.

    Beredugo said the area could also be developed like Dubai, through sand-filling.

    He also believes that protecting the shoreline does not necessarily mean laying stones or sandbags but building permanent structures that can stand the test of time as it is done in Dubai and other places.

    “If Lagos can develop a city inside the ocean, we can do it too,” the kingdom’s secretary said.

    Beredugo also urged Governor Seriake Dickson to continue from where his predecessor Timipre Sylva stopped in the area of tourism development in the kingdom.

    “Governor Sylva started something in the area of developing the rich tourism potentials in the area; I advise that Governor Dickson should continue from where he stopped,” he noted.

    Governor Dickson, while receiving delegates from the Nigerian Liquefied Natural Gas, led by Dr. Jackson Gaius–Obaseki, had indicated the state government’s readiness to provide the enabling environment for the Brass LNG project to achieve its set objectives. Sylva had described the project as a centre of gravity for the development of the state.

    Okpoama has announced preparations for the coronation of the 21st ruler of the kingdom.

    Chief Ebi Johnson-Berebofa, Chairman of the Organising Committee, accompanied by other members of the Okpoama chiefs’ council, gave journalists a graphic account of how Banigo became the king.

    He said that in October 2010, the people of the kingdom came together and democratically elected him following the demise of King Justice Kesiye Sagbe, Okpo XX.

    Dr. Banigo, a business tycoon and banker, was presented with the Staff of Office last November by former Governor Timipre Sylva at a colourful ceremony that attracted the high and mighty in the country.

    Enumerating the qualities of Banigo which endeared him to the kingdom, Johnson-Berefabo said the former Minster of Science and Technology, was a worthy recipient of the crown.

    Banigo, he said, is a “man the kingdom believes can take it to greater heights”.

    The Committee also informed that the Okopama Kingdom had Sikaka, Ibelubelu, Nende, Tia, Kpekiya, Saikiri, Osungu, Onu, Akirigbo, Gboro, Bouyai, Orukari, Goli, Obasi, Obu, Okiringbo, Okparan Tubu, Eei Tamunobere and Kesiye Sagbe “as kings before the election of Ebitimi Emmanuel Banigo as king”.

    The coronation ceremonies will also be used to share the rich historical and cultural heritage of the kingdom, including its rich tourism potentials.

    “The Oil and Gas rich Okpoama Kingdom is the biggest tourism destination in the Niger Delta and an emerging investors’ hub in the Southernmost tip of the Niger Delta,” Johnson-Berebofa said.