Tag: Death toll

  • Death toll in Kogi petrol tanker accident rises to 13

    The Federal Road Safety Corps ( FRSC) yesterday said the death toll in the Friday petrol tanker accident in Felele area of Lokoja, has risen to 13.

    The state FRSC Sector Commander, Olusegun Martins, told newsmen in Lokoja that three other victims died Friday night.

    He said that a staff of the Kogi State Polytechnic, Lokoja, was one of them.

    He said the relations of dead victims have started identifying them but said that six of them were burnt beyond recognition.

    According to him, eight other injured victims of the accident are receiving treatment at the intensive care units of the Federal Medical Centre and the State Specialist Hospital, Lokoja.

    He said that investigation into the cause of the accident was underway.

    10 died instantly in the accident which occurred at about 1:45 pm last Friday at Felele area of Lokoja.

    The accident occurred as a result of a head-on collision involving a bus and tanker laden with 33,000 litres of petrol.

    Eyewitnesses said that the collision ignited a fire which engulfed the two vehicles and a commercial tricycle.

    Most of the victims were occupants of the 18-seater bus believed to be owned by Delta Line.

    The bus was coming from Abuja end of the road while the tanker was coming from Okene end.

     

  • Death toll in Kaduna crisis now 33

    •Police parade 55 suspects

    The death toll in the Kajuru council, Kaduna State, crisis has risen to 33, it was leanrt yesterday.

    Commissioner of Police Agyole Abeh spoke yesterday while parading suspected criminals. He condemned the crisis, describing it as barbaric.

    According to him, 32 persons, mostly women and children, were killed in the attack.

    “On July 11, a young herder was attacked by some youths. His father, who came to rescue him, was assaulted and died in the hospital.

    “The problem started when some youths claimed they saw a Fulani man with a bag, which they said contained military camouflage, but he ran away.

    “The matter was reported and investigation was on when we got information on Monday evening that that the Fulani attacked a remote village in retaliation. Six persons died and two others were injured.

    “The youths immediately mobilised into the bush, killing and burning down any Fulani settlement within sight. The police was contacted but before we got there, 26 Fulani, mostly women and children, had been killed.”

    “I assure you the police will ensure the culprits face the full wrath of the law.”

    The National Secretary of Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association of Nigeria (MACBAN), Abdullahi Ibrahim, said the previous attack, which left four herdsmen dead, followed the abduction of two Fulani indigenes in the area.

    Ibrahim added that the gunmen also attacked Tsonho Damishi community in Chikun council, where they destroyed houses.

    He described the attacks as unwarranted and provoking, and appealed to members of the association to remain calm, and called on security agencies to bring the killers to justice.

    The suspects, aged between 15 and 23, were arrested on the Kaduna-Abuja; Kaduna-Zaria and Kaduna-Birnin Gwari highways, while committing crime.

    Vehicles, locally-made pistols, revolvers, local guns, AK-47 rifles, fake dollars, vehicle batteries, army jacket and burglary tools were recovered from the suspects.

    Abeh said the suspects will soon be charged to court.

  • Death toll in Surulere fracas hits five

    One of those injured in Sunday’s screening of local government election aspirants in Surulere, Lagos, died yesterday in hospital.
    His death brought to five the number of casualties or far.
    Four did on Sunday when fighting broke out at the Surulere Ward E1 screening of aspirants.
    Supporters of prospective councillorship candidates in the All Progressives Congress (APC) clashed during the exercise.
    A party source, who confirmed the death of the fifth person, said the other injured victims were recuperating. He refused to give the names of the victims saying they came in from Ibadan.
    Tunde Ogunlana, Tope Akinmosi, Yinka Jonathan and Barakat Bakare-Akande were screened. Bakare Akande’s choice as candidate was said to have sparked the protest.
    According to a plumber, who refused to be named, the exercise held at Silver Crescent, started around 4:30pm and was peaceful before things went awry. He said the hoodlums came from outside and attacked themselves around Ojuelegba.
    He said: “I don’t know those boys and I don’t pray to ever know them. I am a plumber and knowing them will be a threat to my life. The election went well here yesterday (Sunday). Certain candidates already agreed to step down but I don’t know why those boys decided to start attacking. This area is peaceful and we weren’t involved at all.”
    A bus conductor told The Nation that the hoodlums were rival cultists, adding that they had scores to settle.
    He said: “Those people are mainly from Ibadan, Kwara or Ogbomoso. They don’t have home in Lagos and they belong to cults like ‘Eye’. That’s why they can’t move freely unlike others. You can’t find their family members here. For someone like me, I only come here to hustle; I don’t live here.”

  • Meningitis death toll hits 438

    The Cerebrospinal Meningitis  outbreak disease has now claimed 438 lives across the country including two in Lagos State, according to an update by the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control, (NCDC) yesterday.

    Zamfara State has the highest figure of 262 as at April 5, 2017.

    Sokoto followe with 61 and Katsina State with 48.

    The table shows that three cases were recorded in Lagos State  with two leading to death.

    A total of 3,959 cases were recorded nationwide.

    The NCDC said the apparent increase in number of cases was as a result of intensified case-finding going on in the affected States.

    The most common serotype is Neisseria meningitidis serotype C (Nm C). Meningitis EOC has deployed personnel to support response activities in the five most affected States.

  • Death toll from St. Petersburg metro blast rises to 14 – Ria

    The death toll from the bomb blast in St. Petersburg has risen to 14, Russian agency Ria Novosti quoted the country’s health minister Veronika Skvortsova as saying on Tuesday.

    The blast which happened on a metro train has also injured almost 50 people.

    The death toll had stood at 11 people on Monday.

    In a related development, Russia Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said that the deadly bomb shows the need for joint efforts against global terrorism.

    “(This tragedy in St Petersburg) once again shows the importance of stepping up joint efforts to combat this evil,” Lavrov said at a meeting with his Kyrgyz counterpart Erlan Abdyldayev.

    The attack which has now killed 14 people is now thought to have been carried out by a man born in Kyrgyzstan.

    NAN reports that the St Petersburg television showed footage of the corpse of a bearded man they said was the perpetrator.

    The man resembled footage of a man captured on closed circuit television who Russian media said was a suspect.

    Officials said they were treating the blast as an act of terrorism, but there was no official confirmation of any link to Islamist radicals.

    The National Anti-Terrorist Committee said an explosive device had been found at another station, hidden in a fire extinguisher, but had been defused.

    Authorities closed all St. Petersburg metro stations.

    The Moscow metro said it was taking unspecified additional security measures in case of an attack there.

    The blast raised security fears beyond Russian frontiers.

    France, which has itself suffered a series of attacks, announced additional security measures in Paris.

  • Nigeria needs  $1.1b to fight  Meningitis  as death toll  rises to 328

    Nigeria needs $1.1b to fight Meningitis as death toll rises to 328

    •Senate flays lack of awareness
    •Lagos alert residents on CSM danger
    •Zamfara flayed over handling of epidemic

    Osun denies Meningitis outbreak

    The Osun State government has denied outbreak of Meningitis in the state.
    Parmenent Secretary for the Hospital Managemet Board Segun Aduroja, in a telephone interview, said no single case of the disease had been recorded in its 57 health facilites.
    According to him: “The media report of outbreak of Menigitis in the state not correct. It is quite noticeable in the North and where weather is regualrly hot. The disease is present in an environment where there is so much heat. And now that rain is falling and the weather is relatively cool, menigitis can not thrive.
    “As I am talking to you, no report of the disease in the state. I have 57 health facilities, including state hopitals, comprehensive health centres across the state. None of them has a record of menigitis.”

    $1.1 billion is required for the vaccination of over 22 million persons in the five states affected by Type C cerebro-spinal meningitis disease outbreak, it was learnt yesterday.

    The disease has already claimed 328 lives in five states of Zamfara, Sokoto, Kebbi, Katsina and Niger while 16 other states have recorded at least one case each of the disease.

    The Acting Director General of the National Primary Health Care Development Agency, Dr. Emmanuel Odu, who briefed the Senate Committee on Primary Healthcare and communicable Diseases on efforts being made to contain the outbreak, told the lawmakers that each vaccine costs between $30 and $50.

    The NPHCDA DG said that Meningitis vaccine is not only expensive but also scarce.

    The information is coming as Senate President Bukola Saraki assured the Ministry of Health of the Senate’s commitment to supporting all efforts to put an end to the outbreak of meningitis in the country.

    In a series of tweets on his @BukolaSaraki handle, the Senate President stated that he had spoken with the Minister of Health, Professor Isaac Adewole, to assure him of the Senate’s commitment to help end the epidemic.

    Saraki said:“I applaud FG’s, Ministry of Health, stakeholders and @WHO’s effort to fight meningitis in Nigeria. We need all hands on deck!

    “I spoke to Minister of Health, Prof. @IsaacFAdewole, on the #meningitis outbreak to assure him of @NGRSenate’s support.

    “With a 15% mortality rate, the @NGRSenate stands ready to respond quickly to any requests for emergency assistance for #meningitis.”

    Since December 2015, Nigeria has recorded about 2,524 cases of meningitis.

    The Chief Executive Officer (CEO)/National Coordinator of the NCDC, Dr. Chikwe Ihekweazu, noted that the Type C strain of the disease is new to West Africa, hence the seeming unpreparedness to tackle it.

    Ihekweazu said the vaccination of people would commence tomorrow following the procurement of the vaccines from the World Health Organisation (WHO).

    He said the vaccine was only procured two weeks ago as the criterion for application is that the country must be experiencing an outbreak.

    He noted that the center, working in collaboration with the state governments, Ministry of Health, and the National Primary Healthcare Commission, has adopted a motion three pronged line of action for prevention, early detection and pushing hard to ensure the vaccines are available.

    He said: “This disease is associated with overcrowding, particularly in this weather. We cannot tell people not to overcrowd their homes but we are them to make sure their homes are well ventilated, and to observe good personal hygiene.”

    Ihekweazu said while available treatments work when the disease is detected early, most victims arrive the hospital late for various reasons.

    He noted that the center has however enlisted community and traditional rulers to help persuade their people to go to the hospital immediately they feel sick.

    He underscored the need for the procurement of adequate vaccines to immunize Nigerians ahead of 2018 heat season.

    While the center has sent support teams to Zamfara and other affected states for rapid response, alongside the establishment of treatment centers, not much has been done with the 16 states that are not fully affected, he admitted.

    Ihekweazu said the 16 states would be part of the center’s response approach.

    Chairman of the Committee, Senator Mao Ohuabunwa (Abia North), lamented that awareness remains low across the country.

    Ohuabunwa said the widespread outbreak could have been averted if relevant agencies had commenced campaigns to raise awareness on preventive measures when it first started in December 2016.

    He said: “If this had been detected early, then we would have had rounds of vaccinations and would not be having this epidemic.”

    Senator Borofice Ajayi (Ondo North) also blamed lack of sensitisation campaigns for the widespread outbreak.

    He said: “Since it showed up in the second week of December, the alert to the public is not good enough, particularly as it is known that affected people come late to hospital. This may be because many people do not know how it presents.”

    President Muhammadu Buhari yesterday condoled with the families of the victims of the deadly cerebrospinal meningitis (CSM), which has ravaged some parts of the country.

    Lagos State alerted members of the public on the dangers of CSM, even though no case has been recorded

    This came as Nigeria Medical Association (NMA), Zamfara chapter and the state’s residents, accused the state government of negligence in the handling of the meningitis outbreak that has killed nearly 200 people there.

    Sokoto State Governor Aminu Waziri Tambuwal delivered the president’s message when he led a team on a condolence visit to areas affected by the outbreak in Danchadi village and surrounding areas in Bodinga Local Government Area.

    In Sokoto alone, up to 41 people are known to have died.

    Tambuwal said: “Our leader and President, Muhammadu Buhari, has asked me to condole with all of you over the outbreak of the disease in your localities. He has also asked me to tell you that everything is being done to contain the outbreak and ensure it does not occur again.

    “Health officials have been deployed to affected areas and they have been working round the clock to ensure your safety. We urge you to follow their instructions and at the same time cooperate with them as we tackle this challenge.”

    According to Tambuwal, more than 700,000 people will be immunised by the state government against the Type C strain of the virus in the state’s 23 local government areas.

    But Lagos State Commissioner for Health Dr. Jide Idris, in a statement yesterday, urged residents to report any suspected cases to the nearest health facilities.

    He added that no case of CSM has been recorded in Lagos State contrary to what has been published.

    “However as a responsive government, we deem it fit to alert the public,” he said.

    Idris said the ravaging ailment that broke out in some northern part of the country was caused by Neisseria Meningitides type C, which is slightly different from the causative agent of the seasonal CSM in Nigeria.

    He explained that CSM is a dangerous and a life-threatening disease that affects the thin layers of the tissue around the brain and spinal cord of an infected human person and it is caused by bacteria.

    He added that Cerebrospinal meningitis is an epidemic prone disease that spreads from person to person through contact with discharges or droplets from nose and throat of an infected person, adding that it can also be transmitted through kissing, sneezing and coughing, especially among people living in close quarters, hotels, refugee camp, barracks, public transportation and areas with poor ventilation or overcrowded places.

    Idris explained that the disease usually manifest with high body temperature, pain and stiffness of the neck, headache, vomiting, fear of light, restlessness and confusion stressed that death may occur if not promptly and properly managed.

    The commissioner, therefore, emphasised the need for the observance of high standards of personal and environmental hygiene as a preventive measure against the disease.

    Idris said health workers in the 57 local governments and local council development areas have been placed on high alert and, therefore, the disease surveillance and monitoring activities have since been intensified.

    The Zamfara Chapter NMA and the state’s residents have accused the state government of negligence in the handling of the meningitis outbreak that has killed nearly 200 people there.

    The medical association said the government failed to prepare despite warnings, and has still not responded appropriately to the epidemic.

    NMA, in its statement as reported by the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) said it had observed that the state government was not prepared for the outbreak despite glaring signs of epidemic.

    It said months into the present outbreak of meningitis, Zamfara government was yet to provide the needed vaccines for the general population or at least for the most at risk population.

    The association also decried non-engagement of relevant officials and individuals in the management of the outbreak.

  • Death toll of Rann bombing  rises to 236, says council boss

    Death toll of Rann bombing rises to 236, says council boss

    The death toll of last Tuesday’s accidental Rann bombing in Borno State has risen to 236.
    Already, over 200 of the deceased have been buried by their relations.
    Chairman Kalabalge local government area Babagana Malaria stated these yesterday while briefing the Chief of Army Staff Lt. Gen. Tukur Buratai, who was on an on-the-spot assessment tour of the affected community.
    He also demanded adequate compensation for survivors.
    Malaria said: “With what happened, we are begging Mr. President to compensate us.
    “Many people have lost their lives; most of them were the bread winners.
    “About 234 people and it’s not a small number; we need to compensate these people.
    “Yes! 234 buried by the community. And it’s even more than this.
    “The report I received from Maiduguri this morning was that two who are in the hospital have also died. Therefore we need to be compensated seriously.
    Buratai, who was in Rann to assess firsthand the level of the Air Force operational bombing error, appealed to the indigenes not to lose hope in the Army.
    He assured the incident will not occur again.
    Buratai: “These are the terrorists that came to attack here yesterday almost around 6pm on Thursday so they were able to repel them.
    “The intelligence information we got from our partners was that Boko Haram terrorists were moving into this place and indeed the information was that they are already in this place.
    “It’s not unconnected because you saw them coming to attack them here.
    “Probably it must be the information that was passed to the air component for them to take necessary actions and unfortunately a mistake happened and it has happened before in other places and we pray it doesn’t happen again.
    “They are believed to have been among those sighted by a partner Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance plane and the information sent to the Nigerian Air Force before the error occurred.”
    Also, The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) informed it has raised two surgical teams in collaboration after with Nigerian surgeons to take care of the wounded.
    ICRC said over 100 injured people were evacuated from Rann to Maiduguri.
    The surgical teams in Maiduguri have been operating on the most seriously wounded, including more than 20 children.
    “Patients were taken to operating theatres based on medical priority.
    “By Friday morning, 24 of the most critically injured patients had been operated on.
    “Forty-four more patients will be operated on later today and tomorrow,” said ICRC surgeon, Dr Laurent Singa.
    “One of our challenges was that there were many children, some of whom did not have a family member with them.”

  • Death toll now 76, says Red Cross

    Death toll now 76, says Red Cross

    The International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement (ICRC) said yesterday no fewer than 76 people were killed in Tuesday’s accidental Air Force strike on IDPs’ camp and more than 100 injured. This raised the death toll above the 52 announced by Aid group Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF), after the fatal strike.

    The ICRC said six Nigeria Red Cross members were killed and 13 injured. “In addition to aid staff, it is estimated that 70 people have been killed and more than a hundred wounded,” it said in a statement.

    Also about 46 “severely injured” people remained in the camp yesterday the ICRC said.

    “Patients are attended to in an open-air space in a precarious environment,” the aid group’s statement said, raising the possibility that the death toll could significantly rise.

    The Red Cross statement said the aid group was “shocked” by the deaths of civilians and six aid workers with the Nigerian Red Cross. The group was part of a humanitarian effort to bring food to more than 25,000 displaced people, the statement said.

    At least 90 patients remained in Rann, Kala/Bage Local government area in the northern part of Borno.

    Human Rights Watch called on Nigeria’s government to compensate the victims of the bombing.

    Even if the camp was not bombed intentionally, which would be a war crime, “the camp was bombed indiscriminately, violating international humanitarian law,” Human Rights Watch researcher Mausi Segun said in a statement.

    Calling the bombing accidental doesn’t mean victims should be denied compensation, Segun said.

    The United Nations expressed regrets over the accidental airstrike.

    The UN also called for greater measures to protect civilians in the areas of military operations against the destructive Boko Haram insurgents, according to a statement issued by the Office of the UN Secretary-General.

    “UN humanitarian officials are also questioning how a military airstrike ended up striking the displacement camp.

    “Intermingled with messages of sympathy and solidarity with the victims, UN agencies called for a full investigation and greater measures to protect civilians going forward.”

    The Head of the UN Refugee Agency, Filippo Grandi, who met with Nigerian refugees in Borno in Dec. 2016, called the airstrike “a truly catastrophic event.”

    Grandi, therefore, “called for a full accounting so that the causes are known and measures put in place to ensure this does not happen again.”

    The Nigerian Government has announced that it would investigate the airstrike, it said.

    In its message, the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF),stressed the importance of protecting civilians in complex humanitarian emergencies.

    “UNICEF stands in solidarity with our humanitarian colleagues, and the dangerous conditions they work in.

    “The aid workers who lost their lives were working to save others,” UNICEF Director for Emergency Programmes, Manuel Fontaine, said.

    Amid outpouring of sympathy, UN emergency responders have continued to aid the bombed Nigerian camp, it said.

    “United Nations humanitarian helicopter and emergency medical personnel are in north-eastern Nigeria following a military airstrike that hit a displacement camp killing dozens of people, including aid workers, and wounding a reported 100 others.

    “The UN Humanitarian Air Service (UNHAS), airlifted eight Nigerian Red Cross workers from the camp in Rann as part of the emergency responses.”

    The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), also said the response included nearly 900 lbs of emergency medical supplies.

    “The Nigerian army also deployed a medical team and ‘is working with humanitarian partners to ensure maximum support to the affected people’,” OCHA reported.

    It said the camp was located in Rann, which had been under the control of the group Boko Haram for the past several years, and out of reach to aid workers.

    Around 43,000 people are estimated to be internally displaced and struggle with food shortages as a result of the fighting and bad roads.

    Edward Kallon, the UN Resident Coordinator and Humanitarian Coordinator for Nigeria, had called the airstrike “an unfortunate tragedy that befell people already suffering.”

    UN dispatches medics, airlifts aid officials injured in accidental airstrike

    The UN Humanitarian Air Service (UNHAS) says it has mobilised emergency response following the airstrike on an Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) camp in Rann, a locality in Borno.

    The UN Resident andHumanitarian Coordinator for Nigeria, Mr Edward Kallon, said this in a statement issued by the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (UN OCHA).

    Kallon described the accidental airstrike as “an unfortunate tragedy that befell people already suffering the effects of violence”.

    “The UN Humanitarian Air Service (UNHAS) today dispatched a helicopter with four medical personnel and 400 kg of emergency medical supplies.

    “UNHAS also airlifted eight Nigeria Red Cross workers injured following a military airstrike that hit Rann locality of Nigeria’s north-eastern Borno state.

    “This is an unfortunate tragedy that befell people already suffering the effects of violence,” Kallon said.

    Kallon said the Army had also deployed a medical team and “is working with humanitarian partners to ensure maximum support to the affected people”.

    He said Rann is one of the localities in Northeast that have recently become accessible to humanitarian organisations.

  • Taraba killings death toll hits 42

    Taraba killings death toll hits 42

    The death toll in weekend’s Tiv farmers’ killings in Taraba State has risen to 42, it was learnt yesterday.
    The hacking to death of the farmers by suspected Fulani militia in Gassol Local Government Area has spilled to many Tiv villages, in spite of police and military presence in the area.
    The meeting by Commissioner of Police Yunas Babas, State President of Tiv Cultural and Social Association (TCSA) Goodman Dahida, President of Fulani’s Miyati-Alla, the Lamdo Gassol and security agencies to broker peace was fruitless
    Police, soldiers, Dahida and the Senior Special Assistant to Taraba State Governor, Hon. Jerry Tyolanga, confirmed the rise in death toll.
    Tiv homes were set ablaze, with smokes still billowing when The Nation visited the troubled area yesterday afternoon.
    Six persons were gunned down in Sabon Gari; 16 were slain in other villages. Among them were three women, eye-witnesses said.
    Four trucks conveyed bodies, which were killed. The bodies recovered from the “bush villages”. They were being taken to neighbouring Benue State.
    There was mass exodus of Tiv from Dan-Anacha –fleeing Taraba to Benue State where a bulk of their ethnic group resides.
    The displaced persons looked frustrated, most of them carrying heavy loads, children and domesticated animals but without transportation fares. Some were loudly crying and wailing over the loss of their loved ones.
    The renewed attack and killings of Tiv farmers began on Saturday in Dan-Anacha, whose name was recently changed to Kwararafa, as the state was busy at a “Peace Concert” in a stadium in Jalingo –the state capital – organised by Governor Darius Ishaku.
    Police spokesman David Mishal, who confirmed the killings, was still being expected to brief the press on the details yesterday.
    He described the incident as “undercover attacks where you invade someone’s home and attack him when there is no war going on”.
    Governor Darius Ishaku is seen by the Tiv in Taraba as a peace maker. They held a meeting in Jalingo yesterday on the killings, which are raising national concerns.
    The Tiv community alleged that yesterday’s killings followed a meeting between the Lamdo Gassol and the Fulani militias. “The meeting started by midnight and lasted till 4:00am when the militias began to invade Tiv homes,” one of the displaced farmers, who is injured, said.

  • Lassa fever death toll hits 58

    Lassa fever death toll hits 58

    A total of 58 persons have been confirmed dead by Lassa fever disease outbreak in Nigeria.

    This was out of 83 diagnosed cases in the country.

    Minister of State for Health, Dr. Osagie Ehanire, gave this figure when he paid a working visit to the Irrua Specialist Teaching Hospital to inspect Lassa fever facilities at the hospital.

    Ehanire said the federal government was working hard to stop yearly outbreak of Lassa fever in the country.

    He assured that the disease was gradually being defeated.

    According to the Minister: “We have been trying to curtail Lassa fever, which is going down now and Irrua Specialist Teaching Hospital is one of the centres of excellence. I came to see the status and how well they are coping.

    “This hospital is one of the centres with special facilities and I came to see how well they are coping.

    “I have seen the equipment and the challenges and we are looking at ways to make sure Lassa fever does not become a yearly occurring problem.”