Tag: communities

  • Oil spill: Communities groan, seek FG’s intervention in Delta

    Residents of Edjophe and neighbouring communities in Okpare-Olomu, Ughelli South Local Government Area of Delta on Wednesday decried the impact of oil spill on their communities.

    They consequently appealed to the Federal Government to come to their aid as their means of livelihood were being destroyed by the oil spill.

    The chairman of Edjophe community, Mr College Akpoughegbe, who made the call in interview with newsmen in Ughelli, said that the spillage emanated from a pipeline belonging to the Nigerian Petroleum Development Company (NPDC).

    He said that the incident started on Friday, adding that it had spread to other communities like Iwhrekan and Otor-Edo.

    Akpoughegbe said that spillage had affected farming and fishing activities in the affected communities.

    Akpoughegbe, who attributed the development to equipment failure, alleged that the NPDC officials in a self defence linked the oil spill to activities of saboteurs.

    ‘’The oil spill, which started on Friday, has impacted severely on farming and fishing activities in our communities.

    ‘’The spill emanated from a pipeline belonging to the NPDC but they attributed it to activities of saboteurs.

    ‘’Officials of NPDC, Department of Petroleum Resource (DPR) and the Delta Government carried out a JIV test on Tuesday to ascertain the cause of the spill but the result is not available yet,’’ he said.

    One of the residents, Mr Omonigho Edafe, a farmer, corroborated the chairman’s view, saying that his farmland was greatly affected by the oil spill.

    Effort by the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) to get response from Mr Ugo Atugboko, External Relations Officer of NPDC was unsuccessful, as he said in a text message that he was out of the country.

    ‘’I can’t pick your call, kindly send me a text,’’ Atugboko’s told NAN in a text message.

  • Hope for water in communities

    Hope for water in communities

    The Netherlands has a unique plan of providing water for Abuja rural communities: selling pictures of the deprived settlements and sinking boreholes with the proceeds. GRACE OBIKE reports

    The challenges of communities in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) are well documented. Their roads are nearly impassable. Electricity supply is unreliable. Schools are poorly equipped where they exist. Water supply is woeful.

    What is less reported is what is being done to solve the problems.

    That is where the Netherlands comes in. The country wants to help by providing safe drinking water for the communities, but it aims to achieve the plan in quite a style.

    Its media partner, Media Information Narrative Development (MIND),  went to several such villages, took so many pictures and plans to sell them to people who sympathise with the deprived communities and want to help.

    Residents of such villages as  Kubwa, Karu, Nyanya, Karamajiji, Kuchigoro and a lot of other places buy water from vendors at a huge cost.

    In some communities, residents trek for miles in search of water everyday, something the ambassador of Netherlands John Groffen believes affects their productivity, prevents them from working and being productive enough to make money.

    He explained that unlike most countries, the Netherlands understand the merits and demerits of water since theirs is a country that has experienced several floods of which they have been forced to understand how to manage the excess water to their advantage.

    “It is about raising awareness about the position of poor women living in Nigeria, so we thought of combining the International Women’s Day and Waters Day and come up with a common team and so we came up with water, women and works. So what we try to do with this event which is part of a series of events is to show how fetching water on a daily basis, affects the productivity of women, prevents them from working, from being productive and making money, this exhibition is second in the part of the series of events where we try to raise awareness about the issue.

    “We choose the combination of work, water and women because the Netherlands is a country that is known for water management, we have learnt since centuries to fight against water, we know the importance of water, our country has been flooded many times and we have found ways of protecting our country from flood, we know the danger of water but we also know that water can bring a lot of good.

    “We looked at the similarities, the importance of water in the Netherlands and the importance of water in Nigeria. We decided on the FCT because we have the idea that there are areas in Nigeria that are affected more by the lack of water and if you just travel five minutes, ten minutes out of Abuja, you will be confronted with the reality. So the more people that buy the pictures, the more money we raise, the more that can be done for the specific purpose.

    “MIND is our media partner, we do a lot of programmes with them, the position of women and children, vulnerable elements in the society is something that we focus on and we have been working with them on a couple of projects, also daughters of the Niger delta which is a movie about the situation of women in the area, we do a lot of these projects and this is one of them,” Groffen said.

    The kingdom of Netherlands recently collaborated with MIND to provide potable water to as many communities in the FCT as possible. They visited several of such communities and chronicled their everyday struggle to fetch water, sometimes miles away from their homes. They took pictures of such everyday struggles, enlarged the pictures which where framed and displayed in a gallery, the proceeds from the sale of the pictures will be used to sink boreholes in communities like Kuchigoro, Karamajiji and a lot more.

    Programme Director, MINDS, Ilse Lamoen-Isoun explained that the advantage of these women carrying gallons of water everyday does not only affect their productivity but health because it can lead to severe body aches.

    She said, “The exhibition portrays the water problems that many women here in the FCT face, by water problem we mean inadequate access to clean water, we are trying to show how that impacts women, it’s no news that there is access to water, I think most people already know it but somehow not much is done about it so, we say maybe if we bring out some of the human stories and we really make people feel what it’s like to have to carry all that water for hours through communities or to pay for water with your hard earned money which some of this people don’t have much of anyway but now they have to pay for each and every drop of clean water they want to use, we want to make people feel what it means.”

     

  • Hope for in communities

    The Netherlands has a unique plan of providing water for Abuja rural communities: selling pictures of the deprived settlements and sinking boreholes with the proceeds. GRACE OBIKE reports

    The challenges of communities in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) are well documented. Their roads are nearly impassable. Electricity supply is unreliable. Schools are poorly equipped where they exist. Water supply is woeful.

    What is less reported is what is being done to solve the problems.

    That is where the Netherlands comes in. The country wants to help by providing safe drinking water for the communities, but it aims to achieve the plan in quite a style.

    Its media partner, Media Information Narrative Development (MIND),  went to several such villages, took so many pictures and plans to sell them to people who sympathise with the deprived communities and want to help.

    Residents of such villages as  Kubwa, Karu, Nyanya, Karamajiji, Kuchigoro and a lot of other places buy water from vendors at a huge cost.

    In some communities, residents trek for miles in search of water everyday, something the ambassador of Netherlands John Groffen believes affects their productivity, prevents them from working and being productive enough to make money.

    He explained that unlike most countries, the Netherlands understand the merits and demerits of water since theirs is a country that has experienced several floods of which they have been forced to understand how to manage the excess water to their advantage.

    “It is about raising awareness about the position of poor women living in Nigeria, so we thought of combining the International Women’s Day and Waters Day and come up with a common team and so we came up with water, women and works. So what we try to do with this event which is part of a series of events is to show how fetching water on a daily basis, affects the productivity of women, prevents them from working, from being productive and making money, this exhibition is second in the part of the series of events where we try to raise awareness about the issue.

    “We choose the combination of work, water and women because the Netherlands is a country that is known for water management, we have learnt since centuries to fight against water, we know the importance of water, our country has been flooded many times and we have found ways of protecting our country from flood, we know the danger of water but we also know that water can bring a lot of good.

    “We looked at the similarities, the importance of water in the Netherlands and the importance of water in Nigeria. We decided on the FCT because we have the idea that there are areas in Nigeria that are affected more by the lack of water and if you just travel five minutes, ten minutes out of Abuja, you will be confronted with the reality. So the more people that buy the pictures, the more money we raise, the more that can be done for the specific purpose.

    “MIND is our media partner, we do a lot of programmes with them, the position of women and children, vulnerable elements in the society is something that we focus on and we have been working with them on a couple of projects, also daughters of the Niger delta which is a movie about the situation of women in the area, we do a lot of these projects and this is one of them,” Groffen said.

    The kingdom of Netherlands recently collaborated with MIND to provide potable water to as many communities in the FCT as possible. They visited several of such communities and chronicled their everyday struggle to fetch water, sometimes miles away from their homes. They took pictures of such everyday struggles, enlarged the pictures which where framed and displayed in a gallery, the proceeds from the sale of the pictures will be used to sink boreholes in communities like Kuchigoro, Karamajiji and a lot more.

    Programme Director, MINDS, Ilse Lamoen-Isoun explained that the advantage of these women carrying gallons of water everyday does not only affect their productivity but health because it can lead to severe body aches.

    She said, “The exhibition portrays the water problems that many women here in the FCT face, by water problem we mean inadequate access to clean water, we are trying to show how that impacts women, it’s no news that there is access to water, I think most people already know it but somehow not much is done about it so, we say maybe if we bring out some of the human stories and we really make people feel what it’s like to have to carry all that water for hours through communities or to pay for water with your hard earned money which some of this people don’t have much of anyway but now they have to pay for each and every drop of clean water they want to use, we want to make people feel what it means.”

     

  • Saga of riverine communities who defecate in rivers, from which they drink

    Saga of riverine communities who defecate in rivers, from which they drink

    DEFECATING in the house and going to deposit the excreta in rivers lining the neighbourhood is a common sight in most riverine communities. Checks showed that the residents in some cases go directly to the river to defecate, without feeling abashed about it. For them, it has become an accepted way of life. They stroll out armed with medium paint buckets, nylon bags and newspapers neatly used to package the faeces they had excreted in their various homes and head straight to the river that bounds the community.

    Like short put throwers, they fling the wastes as long as their energy could muster into the river and without minding who was watching, they elegantly walk back to their homes. Beside the spot where they deposited their wastes is where the children in the neighbourhood always have their pleasure bath.

    This was the situation when The Nation visited some riverine communities in Lagos and parts of Ogun State recently.

    Some of the residents after emptying their bowels went and deposited the wastes in the rivers. Not minding what the effect of the rubbish that had been thrown into the river could be, the children who were swimming in the river took a competitive dive, splashing the polluted water at each other’s face in excitement. In the height of their ecstasy, some of the innocent children poured a handful of the water into their mouth and used a finger to scrub round it.

    “We are bathing and catching fun. The excitement we have swimming in the river doesn’t make us to realise whether somebody is throwing excreta into it. We don’t have water supply that can make us bathe as often as we want, especially in this hot weather. We equally don’t have the opportunity to go to swimming pools to swim like our privileged colleagues. This is what we have and we would not hesitate to make good use of it,” one of the children said as he took a plunge back into the river.

    Aside from bathing in the polluted river, checks showed that the river also serves other purposes for the residents who are mostly indigents. In extreme situations, some of the residents said they have had to drink the polluted water from the river. Much as this appears as fun for the children, findings revealed that the ugly development is a problem that has been eating up the adult residents of the riverine communities for a long time.

    It was gathered that they have grappled with the challenge for many decades and have often paid dearly for it as some of them, the children in particular, have had to suffer myriad of illnesses ranging from cholera, diarrhea to other water borne diseases. In fact, medical and environmental experts who spoke with The Nation said the deplorable condition in the communities could have been responsible for the mysterious death of 20 children in Eti Osa Local Government Area of the state early in the year.

    In most of the communities visited by our correspondent, a good number of the aged respondents expressed unreserved anger when they were asked to speak about their condition. It was like opening a chapter of their lives that they had closed and didn’t want reopened.

    A resident of Ebute Iga, Chief Ibikunle Matimoju’s remark showed the frustration and how long the people have lived with this problem. The octogenarian told The Nation that as an infant, his mother used to put alum in the water to purify it before they could have water to drink.

    “We have been in this deplorable condition long before I was born. We have been voting during elections as far back as 1954 when late Chief Obafemi Awolowo and Benson were at the centre of political activities in this environment. Right from that time, politicians have been making series of promises to us, assuring us that they would provide solutions to our challenges but till date, nothing has been done.

    “Aside from the government, several individual’s have always come here with other people to know what our challenges are and always promise to come back to do something thereafter but none of them has ever come back not to talk of doing anything to alleviate our plight.”

    Regretting that his children and grandchildren have inherited the problems they were born with, he said: “We don’t have potable water. My mother used to fetch water from the river and to make it fit for us to drink, she would put alum in it. Back then, the river was not as bad as it right now. As I am speaking with you, we can’t dig wells or toilets in this area because before you dig a foot, water will be everywhere.

    “This is why we defecate in our houses and go to the river to deposit them. I must confess that it t is not a cheering development. It is something that draws tears from our eyes because our children and grand children have come to inherit the problems that we grew up to know.”

    If Chief Matimoju was sad by the development, 100-year-old Pa Salawu Sanni was visibly disturbed when our correspondent sought his view on the issue.

    He noted that the community made conscious efforts to build a toilet for members of the community to avert the stench and health hazard associated with depositing human wastes in neighbourhood rivers.

    “Our late traditional ruler did everything possible for us to build a toilet but it didn’t work out. As you must have heard, we don’t have toilets. We have paint buckets that we defecate in, in our homes. After doing that, we would go and pour it in the river. Our children bathe and swim in the river. What we have done is to tell them the portion they must not go beyond when they are swimming.”

    Chief Lateef Eshinlokun, the traditional leader of the community, also expressed his anger about the plight of community.

    “The problem we are going through in the community is borne out of the fact that they see us as common villagers who do not matter in the scheme of things. They would always come and ask for our vote but immediately we give them our support, they would turn their backs at us. Before I became the traditional ruler of the community, the agency responsible for environmental issues asked us to construct toilet. We made the move but we didn’t dig far before we encountered water.

    “At a point, some officials suggested that we should have a tank where we would be depositing our excreta so that it would be removed from time to time. But before you know what was happening, there were cockroaches everywhere and people could not cope. All that didn’t work at the end of the day. We also attempted to dig a well but that also had its challenges. The water that came out was salty. We couldn’t use it to bathe because it is not good for our body.”

    A visit to Ogolonto, another riverine community in the area also showed how the environmental challenge bedeviling the people is making life unbearable for them.

    One of the residents who identified himself as Ogunsanya Bello said the difficulty in having a proper place to defecate has always put them in serious mess, adding: “Virtually all the houses in this neighbourhood don’t have toilets. We often go to the river to defecate. It is a huge challenge because the stench is always disturbing. Flies and cockroaches do feast on this excreta and later come to perch on our food. This has often caused all manners of sicknesses for the people. Some children end up stooling and vomiting.

    “Aside from the challenge of not having appropriate places to defecate, the problem of water supply is also causing huge problem for us. We always have to buy water but all hands are not equal. Some people don’t have the means of buying water and because they have to use water, they take water from the river that we defecate in to take care of their domestic needs. They bathe, wash and in some extreme cases drink them. This also leads to huge health challenges, some of which may begin o manifest in future,” he said.

    Akeem, a resident of Agboyi Ketu, appeared unruffled about the development as he said: “What is the big deal in bathing in the water that people defecate into? Ai mo iye igbe leko (There is uncountable faeces in Lagos). It appears you are just a new comer to this area because if you are familiar with this environment, you will not be perturbed about what you are seeing.

    “When you are bathing in your house and you see a dirty object in your water, don’t you remove it and continue bathing? That is what happens here but we don’t remove the dirt be it faeces or anything. When you are swimming and you find any rubbish, you dodge it and move in opposite direction. The people that are supposed to be of help to us have abandoned us and we have created an alternative way to survive.”

    Salau Jimoh, another resident of the area, however, expressed worries about their condition, adding that they face all manners of health challenges as a result of it. He said: “Typhoid, skin rashes and diarrhea are common sicknesses that happen here. Unfortunately, our people don’t link it with our state of hygiene. It is always worse for people that are new because their whole body system would be disorganised for sometime before they adjust.

    “At times, some innocent young boys that have not known anything about sex contract gonorrhea in the course of bathing in the polluted water and because going to hospital is not part of us, they would always go and treat it locally. This could have serious reproductive health for them later in life but they are not aware of it.”

    It was also a tale of lamentation at Ilase, a community in the suburb of Ogun State, as the residents narrated their difficulty getting potable water and appropriate place to defecate.

    A prominent member of the community, Mathew Kehinde Alaje, said they were drinking the water in the neighbourhood river before now, regretting that they have lost every access to getting potable water thereafter.

    “We are having problems getting water in this neighbourhood. Many of our people don’t have money to buy sachet water and therefore make do with what they see. This is very unhealthy for the people as it portends great danger to their health. The people in government are not concerned about our plight. They don’t even know that human beings are living here except when election is approaching.

    “Aside from water challenges, many residents also have problems with defecating. Many landlords have attempted to dig soakaways but they ended up abandoning them because they ran into water shortly after they started. This makes it impossible for many to have proper places to defecate. It is worrisome because human wastes are not what you handle carelessly because of the health problems that comes with doing that,” he remarked.

    “We drink, bathe and wash with any water we can lay our hands on because it is not all the time that one has the money to buy water. It is even worse now that the economy is extremely inclement. We go into the bush to defecate because, as you must have heard, we can’t dig soakaway because water comes out as soon as you begin to dig the soil. Just imagine how the blind people in the community will be defecating.

    “Think about how disabled people in the area who crawl would manage to enter the bush to defecate. Don’t you think that before they would have crawled from their houses to the bush, they would have ended up using their bodies to mop the feaces on the floor?  Or would somebody that is on wheel chair move the wheel chair to the bush or river to defecate? It is a serious mess we at hand,” Biodun, a resident, said.

    Alhaja Basirat, another resident of the area, recounted that previous attempts to construct borehole in the community have yielded no fruits.

    “A politician came and gave us a borehole some years ago but it didn’t work. The whole thing is just there. There was also another one that was dug within the premises of our mosque. It brings out water but you can’t use it for meaning things. There is also another one that a corporate body did in a neighbouring community when they were promoting their detergent. They abandoned it after sometime. Through the efforts of the people the borehole has started working but the water it brings out would turn a white container to red within a short time of fetching it. We are suffering from both ends and dying in silence.

     

    Environmental/ medical experts speak

    An environmental expert and Director Corporate Accountability and Administration, Environment Rights Action/Friends of the Earth Nigeria (ERA/FOEN), Akinbode Oluwafemi, bemoaned the condition of the people lamenting that the coastal belt is under siege.

    “Nigeria coastal belt is about 853 kilometers long. That area of our country has suffered enormous environmental challenges as a result of industrialisation and activities of extractive industries.  If you take a look from the Niger Delta side, you will find that there have been oil spills, gas flaring, marine pollution as a result of heavy vessels that come to the state end up in these rivers. Besides, we also have the discharge of all sorts of chemicals into these rivers. All these compromise the environment.

    “The environment in the riverine communities has actually been subjected to a state of siege. There is just no way that the environment can be tolerant of those things and it makes adaptation difficult for the people. In February, 20 children were killed in Eti Osa Local Government Area. Initially people attributed it to a strange disease. But it was later found out that it was measles. So you can link a lot of things going on in the riverine areas with sanitation, water and poverty. There is acute water problem in Lagos State but it is worse. There are some places where the water coming from their boreholes is mixed with petrol and they are drinking it like that,” he said.

    Taking a medical look at the condition of the residents, Dr. Rotimi Adesanya, a public health physician, said: “The residents are bound to suffer enormous health challenges because flies would always perch on their excreta and move on to perch on their food. When they eat food that flies have dropped their larva on, they would be susceptible to suffer from diseases like cholera, typhoid that is endemic. They are also prone to suffering from Hepatitis A and B viruses, skin diseases like measles.

    “Aside from the human wastes that are dumped in the rivers, the wastes constantly dumped in the rivers by various companies are also capable of causing skin problems called dermatitis for the people. Consuming salty water by the people can cause dehydration and make them drink a lot of water. Salty water is concentrated and can cause high blood pressure for the elderly residents in the communities.

    “It can worsen the health condition of those that already have the sickness. Where the water enters their mouth and body system in the course of bathing in the polluted rivers, it can cause diarrhea, stooling and vomiting, especially for the children. It is also capable of causing dysentery an abdominal pains for them.”

    For the residents that are consuming well water, Dr Adesanya has this to say: “Well water contains a lot of chemicals and this can cause electrolyte imbalance. Some of this water is contaminated by mercury which is poisonous to human body and capable of causing untimely death. Some of them also contain lead that could make the children not to be performing well in school because it causes mental retardation.”

     

    Solution

    Proffering solution to the challenge, Dr Adesanya advised: “The residents must work together to get a proper way of disposing off their wastes. The various governments should also make their presence felt in these communities to bring about behavioural change. They should also endeavour o build health centres in these areas to take care of their health needs.”

    Akinbode on his part said: “The people should act by rising to demand that water should be made available to them because they bear the burden of the environmental problem of our development. Developed countries take coastal areas as assets but the coastal belt in Lagos is an apology because everywhere you place your feet, you will step on human wastes.

    “Digging boreholes is not the solution to the problem because this has its own environmental challenges too. There are about 25 water works in the state and from Marina, most of these riverine communities can be served safe water because the distance is just about few kilometers apart.”

    Efforts to speak with the Commissioner for Environment in Lagos State, Mr Adejare Babatunde, were unsuccessful. Thereafter, our correspondent reached out to the public relations officer of the Lagos State Environmental Protection Agency (LASEPA) who after seeking to know the purpose of the enquiry asked him to come on Thursday to speak the Director General (DG).

    The meeting did not also hold as she said the DG was in a meeting, adding: “The issue does not fall within the purview of what LASEPA does. It is the ministry of environment that can speak on it.”

    However, the commissioner for the environment at a recent retreat organised to review and consolidate on the draft of the Lagos State Water and Sanitation Policy (WASH) in preparation for its presentation to the state executive council promised to ensure a speedy implantation of the policy. He also expressed optimism that an implementation of the policy will lead to decline in childhood mortality.

    “Through the WASH policy, we are teaching mothers to be more hygienic and to use safe water to provide food for their babies. The number one killer of children is diarrhea, so if we take care of the safe water part of it, that would lead to decline in the death of children,” Dr Adejare submitted.

    Speaking after the death of 20 children suspected to have died of measles early in the year, the Commissioner for Health, Mr Jide Idris, also said: “The state government is conducting mapping of all slum areas in the state toward reducing the health hazards associated with such areas.”

  • Host communities back modular refinery project

    Leaders of the Onisiwo Island near Takwa Bay, Lagos, where the proposed modular refinery of Integrated Oil and Gas Limited will be located, have backed the project.

    At a public forum in Lagos, a leader of the baales and other members of the communities, Lateef Akinsode,  condemned the petitions against the project.

    In a communiqué after the stakeholders’meeting, the communities gave their support to the construction of the refinery. A resolution was reached between integrated oil and gas and the communities.

    Akinsode condemned the alleged petition and sponsored media attacks by Raymond Gold and Christina Armstrong Ogbonna against the project. The community leaders described the allegations as “deceitful and untrue” and dissociated themselves and their communities from it.

    He said the communities supported the proposed Tomaro Island refinery development project, adding that the  development that will follow the construction of the project will be enormous.

    The community leader said the communities disassociated themselves from the petition by Raymond Gold and Christina Armstrong Ogboon, asking the duo to apologise to the communities and the oil firm.

    “We, the Baales of the various communities on the Onisowo Island and the Onisowo family, hereby disassociate ourselves from this false representation of events on the island and would also wish to publicly apologise to the chairman of Integrated Oil and Gas for the embarrassment caused by the publication.”

    Contrary to the claim of Gold, the community leaders said they were aware of the plans of Integrated Oil and Gas for the island and had been carried along in all the discussions.

    “We are aware of the plans of Integrated Oil and Gas Limited for the island and we have had several engagements with the management over the last two years, including the meeting we held last month with the representatives of the Federal Ministry of Environment from Abuja as part of the initial preparation for the Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA).

    “Integrated Oil & Gas has always engaged with our communities through us, the Baales, and we have always passed down the information to members of our communities on their plans for the island. We know that these projects will bring development like roads, borehole water, electricity, among others, to the island and provide jobs for our youths.

    “It is clear that some people do not want progress to come to this island but instead they would wish to blackmail Integrated Oil and Gas in the hope to make money for themselves, hence the wicked letter and publication by these fellows,”they said.

    The Group Managing Director of Integrated Oil and Gas Limited, Mr. Anthony Iheanacho, said on April 2, its $116 million modular refinery would come on stream before the end of the year, adding that the company had been given provisional licence to commence preliminary work for a 20,000-barrel capacity modular refinery.

  • ‘BUA had challenges with host communities’

    The Bureau of Public Enterprises (BPE) yesterday confirmed that Bua Group Sugar Estate in Lafiagi, Kwara State had initial problem with host communities on land disputes.

    Its Head, Public Communications, Mr. Alex Okoh, made this disclosure why responding to a report in one of the national dailies about the company’s claim of having its own privatization challenges were part of the setback that affected its smooth take-off.

    He however said the BPE Post Privatization Monitoring Unit was reviewing the company’s performance and ensuring the implementation of its business plan, despite the initial problem.

    Okoh said that the new owners that took over the company  in 2014, have gone beyond ground preparation to purchase some equipment.

  • ARMTI partners communities to boost local food enterprises

    The Acting Executive Director, Agricultural and Rural Management Training Institute (ARMTI), Ilorin, Kwara State, Anthony  Njoku has reiterated the institute’s determination to help communities increase economic opportunities for local farmers and related businesses.

    Njoku, who spoke at the opening ceremony of the institute’s Training Workshop on Cassava Commodity Value Chain Development for participating communities in its Village Alive Development Initiative (VADI), said: “The Village Alive Development Initiative (VADI) is an action-research project of ARMTI to selected rural communities in our area of operation.

    “The initiative is aimed at creating a sustainable and self-reliant community-based organisation for rural dwellers to initiate and implement programmes, which will improve their standard of living and social status, by reducing their level of poverty. It also provides field practicum complement for ARMTI courses while also serving as Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) for the institute.”

    He disclosed that ARMTI has just acquired and installed two sets of cassava processing equipment in two of the participating communities. “Now we are conducting this four-day training workshop on cassava commodity value chain development for all our participating communities. Having identified our area of comparative advantage as a state, we are committed to provide all the support needed to achieve maximum leverage and dividends from it,” he said.

    The institute, he explained, has embarked on a different, locally-driven approach to help people access healthy local food and supports new businesses in the villages that need investment. With technical assistance through the scheme; he said participants are taking innovative approaches to common challenges, like launching business incubators to support food entrepreneurs.

    So far, more than N10 million has being spent on eight rural communities in Kwara State under VALDI. The money was distributed by a commercial bank to villagers, forming contributory groups under a revolving loan arrangement.

    During the during the kick-off of seed fund disbursement to seven participating communities under VADI in Ilorin, in  2014, the  Kwara State Governor,  Abdulfatah Ahmed canvassed that modern and affordable technologies be made available for the nation’s teeming farmers, while more robust policies should be formulated to sustain the interest of the overwhelming population in both agricultural and other business practices.

    He noted: “This project is timely and would complement the new initiatives of the Kwara State Government as well as the Federal Government to shift the focus of citizens as beneficiaries of an oil-based economy to proponents of an agro-driven economy.

    “Ironically, our strengths happen to lie in the vast agricultural resource potential of the state and the nation, and with the adoption of modern agro technology and agronomic practices that will be sustained for devoted farmers and coherent and stable development policies, we are certain that agricultural growth is a realisable objective in the not too distant future.”

  • Ogoni crisis: Residents condemn Wike over ‘one-sided’ visit to affected communities

    •Blame politicians for killings –Group

    Residents of Rivers State have condemned Governor Nyesom Wike for failing to visit the burnt senatorial office of Magnus Abe during his visit to Yeghe and other communities affected by the recent crisis in Ogoni land.

    The people urged the governor to show concern to all the people affected by the crisis.

    It will be recalled that Governor Wike, along with the state Commissioner of Police, Mr Musa Kimo, visited Yeghe and other communities in Bori and Mortuaries, but failed to visit Magnus Abe’s office.

    In a statement by Simeon Nwakaudu, Special Assistant to the Rivers State Governor on Electronic Media, the governor accused some politicians of deliberately instigating crisis in the state to create room for the evil declaration of state of emergency.

    Some residents, who spoke to The Nation, said the governor should have used his visit to make peace and calm down the youths of the area by visiting all the victims of the crisis.

    Mr. Paul Onyedi, a business man, said he was unhappy that the governor visited Ogoni as a politician, and not as the governor of the state.

    “What happened has happened, but the kind of statement credited to the governor of Rivers State would only worsen the situation in  Ogoni. I was expecting him to visit the place and also try to visit the burnt office of Magnus Abe. But he went there as a party man, not as the governor of Rivers State.”

    Chief Akwubi Mathew, a community leader, said, “The only way out is to forget about politics for now. The killing that took place in Ogoni was between armed militants and the military. And for now, we don’t know who is responsible for the killing, but let there be peace.”

    Mrs. Rita Ndabari, said it was important that the governor visited the communities and promised to pay compensations to the victims, but regretted that the governor failed to visit affected persons who are not members of his party.

    Also speaking, the National Coordinator of Ogoni Solidarity Forum, Celestine AkpoBari, said his group condemned the killing in Ogoni land, and blamed the state of insecurity in the area on politicians, who he said distributed arms to jobless youths during the 2015 election.

    AkpoBari said: “We condemn the killing of innocent Ogoni people. We condemn the attack on Magnus Abe. But you must know that the insecurity in Ogoni today was because of the arms distributed to some youths during the 2015 election by some politicians for the purpose of smuggling themselves into the corridor of power,” he alleged

  • Communities comply with street gates policy

    Communities comply with street gates policy

    Residents and communities across Lagos State are complying with the policy of the Akinwunmi Ambode administration to keep their street gates open between 5.30am and 12midnight daily.

    A statement by the Special Adviser to the Governor on Communities and Communications, Mr Kehinde Bamigbetan disclosed that random checks and feedbacks from the officials of the Community Development Associations with pictorial evidence demonstrate that the residents have embraced the policy.

    Streets which have town open their gates include Aisha Animashaun, Awori, Johnson and Olutunda in Ilupeju, Association Avenue, Kayode Adebanji in Ejigbo, Olutosin Ajayi in Ajao Estate, Ayanboye Street, Kosofe and Fawole Street in Shomolu.

    Commending Lagosians, Bamigbetan urged community leaders to mobilise more landlords to ensure that the objectives of the administration are achieved.

    It would be recalled that the administration revived the open gate in daytime policy to facilitate the patrol of the neighbourhoods by the police, provide speedier access for fire fighters and save pregnant women in labour from avoidable death.

    The government, Bamigbetan said, took the decision following appeals from the general public and the difficulties encountered by state officials providing emergency services to the public.

  • Communities comply with street gates policy

    Communities comply with street gates policy

    Residents and communities across Lagos State are complying with the policy of the Akinwunmi Ambode administration to keep their street gates open between 5.30am and 12midnight daily.

    A statement by the Special Adviser to the Governor on Communities and Communications, Mr Kehinde Bamigbetan disclosed that random checks and feedbacks from the officials of the Community Development Associations with pictorial evidence demonstrate that the residents have embraced the policy.

    Streets which have town open their gates include Aisha Animashaun, Awori, Johnson and Olutunda in Ilupeju, Association Avenue, Kayode Adebanji in Ejigbo, Olutosin Ajayi in Ajao Estate, Ayanboye Street, Kosofe and Fawole Street in Shomolu.

    Commending Lagosians, Bamigbetan urged community leaders to mobilise more landlords to ensure that the objectives of the administration are achieved.

    It would be recalled that the administration revived the open gate in daytime policy to facilitate the patrol of the neighbourhoods by the police, provide speedier access for fire fighters and save pregnant women in labour from avoidable death.

    The government, Bamigbetan said, took the decision following appeals from the general public and the difficulties encountered by state officials providing emergency services to the public.