Tag: Delta

  • Delta ACN crisis: Group lashes impostors, reaffirms Ogbuagu’s leadership  

    FOLLOWING the lingering crisis that has trailed the Delta State Chapter of the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) state executive, a group, Urhobo Young Generation for Change (UYGC), yesterday lashed impostors in the party and reaffirmed the leadership of former Commissioner for Education, Dr. (Mrs.) Veronica Ogbuagu, former Senator (Prof) Adego Eferakeya and others.

    In a statement by the National President of the Urhobo Young Generation for Change (UYGC), Comrade Wilson Akpos, who alleged the state executive of the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) and its cohorts are impostors, said they were sent to the party to upturn its activities in favour of the ruling party.

    Akpos said, “We know those impostors in the ACN and it is for this reason we are making this issue public because of their antecedent in the 2011 general election and they are still the same people piloting the affairs of the party in the state, so we are calling on the national body to come fish them out if the party must forge ahead.”

    “We only have confidence on the leadership of Dr. (Mrs.) Veronica Ogbuagu, Senator (Prof) Adego Eferakeya and Hon. Harvest lgben as pillars of the party in the state, and in a strong term l will say these are the only dedicated and committed leaders the party has of this moment.”

    Comrade Akpos, Personal Assistant to late Chief Ogbe Onokpite said this while reacting to a publication in one of the national dailies accusing Dr. (Mrs.) Veronica Ogbuagu as a woman being used to destabilise the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) in favour of the PDP as claimed by a forum of Urhobo Political Agenda.

    He alleged that it was noticed that the Adolor-led state executive and cohorts had bargained and sold ACN out to PDP before the 2011 elections and betrayed the party and that there is likelihood that history might repeat it self.

     

  • Floods: UN to assist Delta

    Floods: UN to assist Delta

    Delta State Governor, Emmanuel Uduaghan, said on Thursday that the United Nations would assist the state in the rehabilitation of persons displaced by flood.

    The governor, who disclosed this during a meeting with political office holders in Delta, said the state had already been listed by the world body for the assistance.

    He said the World Health Organisation and other UN agencies had indicated interest to assist the state.

    The governor explained that the state government applied to the body, cataloguing the problems generated by the flood.

    “We applied formally to the UN for assistance in the management of the flood problems and they have responded positively and have listed Delta as one of the two states in the country for assistance now,’’ the News Agency of Nigeria quoted the governor as saying at the meeting.

    He also disclosed that Delta State Oil Producing Areas Development Commission (DESOPADEC) had promised to donate relief materials to the victims relocated to various camps created by the government.

    The governor solicited the cooperation of all government officials and agencies in the management of the flood problem, especially in the evacuation and rehabilitation of victims of the disaster.

    “This is not time to quarrel; not time to think along ethnic lines. Let us all come together in this matter,” he said and asked people in the state, especially those in government to donate clothes to the victims.

    “Those of us who can pray should visit the camps and pray with the people and I appeal to professionals to visit the camps and impart knowledge or use their skills to provide services to the victims,” he added.

    Uduaghan directed that commandants of the camps should “throw out” any voluntary organisation asking for stipend to be paid to its members.

     

  • Delta communities battle floods

    Delta communities battle floods

    The unprecedented flood ravaging parts of the country has sacked over 20 coastal and inland communities along Ase River, in Delta State, leaving the victims in grief and counting their losses.

    Among the communities that suffered the most devastation are Asafo, Asaba-Ase, Egbeme, Ibedeni, Ase, Ivrogbo and Iyede-Ame and environs.

    Added to these are other numerous towns and villages along the River Niger. As of the last count, more than twenty towns and several villages have fallen prey to the flood, a development that has no history of its kind known to any of its victims.

    Some displaced residents of the communities, told The Nation over the phone, that all the people have fled the areas, except a few community leaders, living in canoes, who opted to stay just to monitor the situation.

    A fleeing resident, Mr. Sam Odiebara Miller, said what has happened is a complete disaster, adding that the situation is getting worse. “Nobody has a clue as to what to do next, or the way out of this. We are so confused, we don’t even know how to respond. All we have to do is gather the family together, take to the hired speed boats and outboard engines and flee,” he stated.

    On government’s response to their plight, he said the intervention is slow and far between. He said nearly all the people that have relocated did so on their own sponsorship, adding that no assistance came from the government. He said however, that he understood the state government arranged for the rescue of inhabitants of Iyede-Ame and other surrounding settlements whose conditions, deteriorated, adding that other areas along the River Niger have been included in the rescue effort.

    At Asaba-Ase, the Youth President, Nosike Anagbogu, said the situation has reached an alarming rate, with over 4,000 people squatting in the only landed portion, with virtually no means of sustenance. He said the Governor, Dr. Emmanuel Uduaghan, sent a monitoring team to the town, promising that relief materials would be sent at a later date.

    At Asafo and Egbeme axis, only a few individuals are left, with the majority relocated to Irri, Oleh and other places in Isoko South and Isoko North Local Government Areas, where relief centres have been established, while others with means and family assistance, have secured temporary accommodation.

  • Delta judge’s kidnap: Activist threatens legal action

    THE Igba of Warri, Chief Rita Lori Ogbebor, has restated her call for a probe into the kidnap of a Delta State Judge, Justice Marcel Okoh, on August 7.

    She threatened to seek legal action, if the probe does not begin after seven days.

    The activist said the ultimatum was necessary following failure by the authorities to respond to calls for an investigation into the incident.

    Justice Okoh was kidnapped on the day he was to rule on a land dispute between the Delta State government and the people of Okere, Warri.

    His kidnap led to the adjournment of the case to September 24. When Justice Okoh was freed, the case was reassigned to another judge, who adjourned it to October 8.

    On September 3, Chief Ogbebor petitioned the Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN), Justice Aloma Mukhtar; the Chief of Defence Staff, Air Marshal Oluseyi Petinrin; Inspector-General of Police (IGP) Muhammad Abubakar and President, Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), Mr. Okey Wali (SAN) on the matter.

    The Itsekiri leader argued that the “purported kidnap” was a “mere smokescreen” to rob her people of justice. She said the delayed judgment prompted the state government to continue building on the land.

    The petition reads: “I suspect that the purported kidnap is a smokescreen meant to pervert the course of justice and hereby call for a probe. If the judge was indeed kidnapped, what has the government done about it? It needs to be conclusively proven that the kidnap was not make-believe. How can a Judge be seized so cheaply, when politicians have, not only thugs, but soldiers and policemen to guard them? Will this situation not intimidate our judges?”

    Chief Ogbebor said although a top government official had apologised to the judiciary, but it was not enough to heal the wounds inflicted on the legal system.

    She said: “I reiterate the call for a probe because the court is the last hope of the common man and our judges should not be made to operate in an atmosphere of intimidation, harassment and constant threat. The oath of office they took is to dispense justice without fear or favour and be impartial umpires.”

    Chief Ogbebor expressed doubts over reports that Justice Okoh’s kidnappers had been killed by security agents. She said: “We need all the details to assure us that there is not more than meets the eye in the entire kidnap saga.

    “I believe the police and the judiciary can save Nigeria, if they do their work well. In contributing my quota to the equilibrium and cohesion of society, I have resolved to head to court unless a probe panel is set up to look into the circumstances of the judge’s kidnap.”

  • Delta ACN faults list of DESIEC members

    Delta ACN faults list of DESIEC members

    THE Delta State chapter of the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) yesterday faulted the list of nominees for the State Independent Electoral Commission (DSIEC) sent to the House of Assembly by Governor Emmanuel Uduaghan.

    In a statement by its Publicity Secretary, Mr. Frank Eghomien, ACN alleged that some of the nominees, particularly Mr. Ewere Simon Eluebo, are card-carrying members of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    It alleged that Eluebo is registered as a PDP member at Ward 10, Idumuesah, Ika North-East Local Government Area.

    The statement reads: “Eluebo is a well-known card-carrying member of the PDP and a retired teacher from Marymount College, Boji-Boji, Owa. He was a member of the Nigerian Union of Teachers (NUT) while he was in service.

    “Further investigations revealed that some sitting legislators and PDP chieftains in Ika North East recruited Eluebo and forwarded his name to the governor with a view to planting him as a PDP agent in the commission to perfect their rigging of the forthcoming council elections.

    “The ACN is apprehensive that if these anti-democratic plots are not quickly nipped in the bud, a needless breakdown of law and order may result in the council.

    “We call for the redeployment of the Executive Secretary of the Commission, Elder Owhoavwodiasa Etederhi Osharode to his civil service duties as an Administrative Officer, and that a retired senior civil servant, with good credentials of honesty, hard work and good conscience, be appointed on contract to replace him.

    “We demand that Eluebo’s name be removed from the list of nominees forwarded by the governor to the House for the DSIEC job and replaced with a neutral and God-fearing candidate.”

     

  • How passion is driving healthcare delivery in Delta

    How passion is driving healthcare delivery in Delta

    Dr. Joseph S. Otumara is the longest serving commissioner in the Delta State government. He has been at the commissioner of health for over nine years, before which he served as chairman of Warri South Local Government for three terms. He spoke extensively on multifarious issues of his ministry in this interview with Associate Editor Taiwo Ogundipe.

    We want you to give an overview of the Delta State health programmes.

    The government of Governor Eweta Uduaghan came into office five years plus ago, precisely May 29, 2007. One of the first things he set himself to do, perhaps as a medical doctor, was to declare a free maternal health programme in Delta State. And that was done precisely on the 27th of November, 2007. In a couple of months we will be celebrating our five years in that programme. Also about two years ago we also instituted the free under-five health programme. The programmes are focused on reducing maternal and under- five mortalities. Both mortalities are economic indicators of knowing how well a nation or state is doing. And as part of the global community, Delta State also buys into global world’ thinking of the reduction of maternal mortality by 3/4 and under-five mortality by 2/3 by the year 2015. We are also talking about the reduction of the incidence of malaria and prevalence of HIV.

    Basically, it is one thing to make a hospital available. The problem of sicknesses and death in Nigeria and in other parts of Africa is two-fold. There is the issue of geographical access as well as that of financial access for the people. It is either a government is unable to build sufficient hospitals for the patients to go to when they are ill or the hospitals are available but the people cannot afford to pay for the services. But here in Delta State the situation is different, with what the government has been doing. Uduaghan’s has built a lot of health centres. He has ensured that in every local government headquarter there is at least a general or a government hospital. Today, we have over 460 primary health care centres, over 60 government hospitals general or central hospitals and the tertiary hospital which is the teaching hospital in Oghara. So, within a radius of five kilometres, as directed by the World Health Organisation (WHO), there is a health centre or government general hospital.

    Having satisfied the condition of geographical access to hospitals, what the governor then did by instituting the free maternal and under-five health programmes is to ensure that hindrance to financial access is removed. So far, we have recorded over 230,000 patients benefiting from these programmes. From the time a woman is pregnant to six weeks after delivery, all medical attentions, treatments and laboratory investigations, if she comes to our government hospital, are free of charge. Government is responsible for the payment of all these fees. When a patient registers, she is given a card free of charge; she goes to see the nurses that take all the vital signs, which is also free of charge; she also sees a doctor who attends to her free of charge; if the doctor recommends a laboratory investigation such as blood test, ultra-sound scan; she also does it for free. And at delivery, whether caesarian section or normal delivery, it is also free.

    Some people believe there is bias for the health probably because the governor has a background in medicine as a medical doctor. What do you have to say about this?

    Well, not exactly. I’m sure there are a lot of things that you will see that the government is doing if you going round the state. You’ll see most of the primary and secondary schools renovated. They are in good working conditions and the infrastructures are excellent. Teachers have been employed. I wouldn’t know if I should say he is biased toward education too. And then, a lot of roadwork is going on intra-city and intercity. But I must say that as a medical doctor, he understands medicine very well. He has empathy for patients. He understands the issue of maternal and under-five mortalities. And being a doctor, he has done well in trying to bring issues to the x-co and trying to convince the cabinet members. If he weren’t a doctor, perhaps some of the urgency and attention which he gives to my memo wouldn’t have been there. Health care delivery in Delta State has truly gotten to a level that everybody is happy about.

    Every month, the government hospitals treat up to 50,000 patients in the under-five mortality programme. If you multiply 50,000 by 12, that is about 600,000 every year. In the past two years plus, you can imagine the number that we have recorded. That is 25 percent of the population of the state. Delta State population is about 4.2 million as at the last census figure. In which case, we are dealing with about one million of the population medically and surgically.

    Apart from the programmes of maternal and under-five mortality, we also have a programme we call the rural health scheme. In the scheme, we assemble doctors of different specialties, but basically ophthalmologists, eye surgeons, obstetrics and gynaecologists, general surgeons and general practitioners. We realise that in spite of the programmes the government has put in place, there are some people who would rather stay behind particularly in the rural areas and not avail themselves of these opportunities. If you go to the villages and other rural communities, you will see that diseases have marked and disabled some people completely. And so we go round thecommunities once in a year starting from the dry season in October till about January the following year. We take about 100 to 120 communities as we go round. Every local government is touched. Even if your community is not involved and you have a surgical condition, you can move into another community to enjoy the benefit.

    We are going to start this year’s programme in about a month or two months time. And we are even more equipped. We have a moving theatre and ward in which we are going to be admitting patients and carrying out operations.

    It is noticed that the drugs that are being dispensed in the hospitals and health centres are branded with the governor’s photographs, what informed this?

    Yes, we did that recently because we noticed that a lot of pilfering was happening to some of our drugs. We also did it to show that this is the man that is making everything happen. We also inscribed on the drugs that they are not for sale. They are free for the health programmes. So, anybody who sees any of the drugs in a chemist shop would know that it had been stolen. The drugs are specially made for the programmes. We have one of the best drug-revolving fund systems in the country. What we do in our health n a monthly basis to the pharmaceutical companies that supply the department that handles pharmacy affairs. The head of the department is a lady doctorate degree holder. We always have enough drugs although we cannot rule out the possibility of some being out of stock some times. We always query the pharmacists at the peripheral hospitals far away from the central drug store if they don’t make requisition on time. Requisitions are supposed to be made one week ahead when it is realized that the drug stock is depleting. programmes is that all the costs we incur on of drugs and reagents for laboratory investigations are calculated and paid for on a monthly basis to the pharmaceutical companies that supply the department that handles pharmacy affairs. The head of the department is a lady doctorate degree holder. We always have enough drugs although we cannot rule out the possibility of some being out of stock some times. We always query the pharmacists at the peripheral hospitals far away from the central drug store if they don’t make requisition on time. Requisitions are supposed to be made one week ahead when it is realized that the drug stock is depleting.

    We also have an appeal fund scheme for some health conditions that require medical condition outside the country. We have been doing that for five years. We started with N250 million, raised it to N300 million and in this year’s budget, it is N400 million. They are for the rare conditions that we cannot attend to in Nigeria. They include kidney transplant as is done today in India, the United Kingdom and the United States of America. These cost as much as N3 million to N4 million. People make appeal for this fund and the governor graciously, after giving his approval, releases this money. Other cases that had been handled included hole-in-the heart condition suffered by children, diabetic gangrenous ulcer, among others.

    What would you describe as the essence of Governor Uduaghan’s government?

    Governor Uduaghan’s vision is to have Delta State as one united entity. Before now there always ethnic clashes among the Itshekiris, the Urhobos , the Ijaws, etc. Today, we have a harmonious state courtesy of Governor Uduaghan. His vision is to have a united Delta State that flourishes with healthy, educated and economically empowered people. He has achieved this to a great extent since he has been in the saddle. He is also enhancing the geographical contiguity of the state by constructing roads and building bridges that will bring the people closer to one another. This bridge-building has been physical, political and social. He is also building schools and offering free education.

  • Five die in Delta road crash

    Five members of a family yesterday died in an accident on the Onitsha-Benin Expressway.

    The accident occurred at Ubulu-Okiti Junction in Aniocha South Local Government Area of Delta State.

    It was gathered that the victims were travelling from Ekiti State to Awka in Anambra State.

    Sources said the Toyota Hilux conveying them lost one of its tyres and skidded off the road.

    The victims include a man, his expectant wife, two children (a male and a female) and a steward.

    The bodies of the victims were evacuated by men of the Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC).

    They have been deposited at the mortuary of the Federal Medical Centre (FMC), Asaba.

    An 82-year-old relative of the victims, a woman, who was also in the vehicle, miraculously survived the accident. Another passenger, also a member of the family, was rushed to the intensive care unit of the FMC.

     

  • NDDC to sanction erring contractors

    NDDC to sanction erring contractors

    The Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) is set to purge erring contractors just as it threatens to review the Ayetoro land reclamation and shore protection contract in Ondo State.

    Managing Director of the Commission, Dr. Christian Oboh who stated this when he led a team of NDDC Board members on an inspection tour of Ondo, Edo and Delta States, said the moves have become imperative in view of the attitude of some contractors.

    Represented by Ondo State Representative on the board, Omogbein Oladele, Dr. Oboh lamented that the project conceived to save communities in the area threatened by high waves from the ocean was being treated with levity.

    He assured the people of Ayetoro and other beneficiaries of NDDC projects that the commission was determined to complete ongoing projects in line with the transformation agenda of President Goodluck Jonathan.

    “The commission is now paying contractors as soon as they achieved specified milestones’, we have also placed some key projects on fast-track to ensure that they are completed in the shortest possible time” he said.

    According to the Managing Director “cases of agitations would be reduced when numerous projects being executed by the commission were completed and handed over”.

    He, therefore, charged contractors working for the NDDC to buckle up as “the board will not entertain excuses for non performance”.

    The inspection team visited the Obozogbe-Abudu 24km road in Edo State which they described as not only commendable but a testimony of commitment on the part of some local contractors.

    The team also expressed satisfaction with the pace of work on the Ugheli multi billion Naira flood control project as well as the university hostel projects at Abraka.

  • Residents of flood-prone areas  in Delta refuse to relocate

    Residents of flood-prone areas in Delta refuse to relocate

    Residents of flood-prone areas in Delta State have failed to relocate. They said they have no place to go.

    On Monday, the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) ordered an immediate evacuation of people living on the plains of the River Niger.

    The agency warned that there would be an overflow of the River Niger, owing to water coming from the Kainji and Jebba hydro dams, and it would lead to unprecedented flooding.

    It urged residents of the communities in Niger, Kogi, Kwara, Kebbi, Anambra and Delta states to move to higher grounds for safety.

    At Cable Point in Asaba, a community located in Oshimili South Local Government Area (LGA) of Delta State, several residents said they were not aware of the flood warning.

    On the bank of the River Niger, several young men dredged sand from the riverside into a waiting truck.

    A middle-aged woman sold bread, cigarette, alcohol and other items to them.

    Mr. Richard Onwusa, a retired teacher and landlord, said the state government had not informed the community of its plans for residents.

    He said: “I have lived here for more than 30 years. A few years ago, I saw the river extend 10 to 20 metres beyond its bank, but not this enormous storm that is imminent.

    “If the government wants the evacuation order to be meaningful, it must assist the likely victims. Many residents do not know what to do. They are expecting the government to come up with a plan for shelter and more details on the imminent flood.”

    Mr. Emeka Okeke (25) said: “I make my living from the River Niger everyday by loading sand into trucks. I have nowhere to go.”

    The palace of the leader of the Hausa Community is situated a few metres away from the river bank.

    The Secretary of the Hausa Community, Mallam Gambo Mohammed, urged the state government to provide shelter for the residents.

    He said: “We have been hearing rumours about an imminent flood in this area and have seen officials of marine authorities patrolling the river, but nobody told us anything until now.

    “I have been in this community since 1985 and we have never experienced any flooding. There are times when the water rises and comes around people’s homes, but I cannot remember any destruction of lives or property.”

    At Grand Hotel, a tourist resort on Nnebisi Road, Asaba, which overlooks the River Niger, the Acting General Manager, Mr. Chukwuma Okolo, said their business was going on unhindered.

    Okolo said: “Our fence is firm and flood cannot destroy it.”

    He said the hotel suspended its water recreation activities, such as surfing and boat rides on the River Niger, a few months ago.

    A former lawmaker, Mr. Peter Biakpara, who hails from Tamigbe in Burutu Local Government Area, described the warning by NEMA as laughable.

    He said: “I read the warning and laughed, because I have lived more than 50 years of my life on the River Niger in Tamigbe. I have seen high tides and low waters and have never had reason to move elsewhere.

    “I and my family are going nowhere. These things (flood) have happened before and we have taken precautions.”

    Commissioner for Information Chike Ogeah said: “The Ministry of Environment will soon take steps to ensure the safety of the lives and property of our citizens.”