Tag: expert

  • Expert frowns against usage of foreign contractors by govt

    Expert frowns against usage of foreign contractors by govt

    The immediate past Chairman, Nigeria Society of Engineers (NSE) Ibadan, Oyo State  chapter, Mr Olugbenga Ilori has condemned what he called the excessive usage of foreign contractors by government, which he claimed has caused degeneration to engineering profession.

    Ilori spoke while delivering a lecture entitled:” Engineering Development: The necessary tool in nation building” at the 20th Arokodare Memorial lecture in Ibadan, the Oyo State capital.

    According to him, this step amounts to waste of government resources and retrogression of engineering development in the country.

    Ilori said:” Nigeria has no re?ason to look outward for consultants if we are to develop technologically. What magic will the Chinese perform on railway modernisation that Nigerian consultants cannot. Do?. It took the Chinese 40 years to study and develop three Gorges Dam which is now the largest dam in the world, supplying 10 per cent China’s electricity consumption. They did not call on German or Italians for help. The Nigerian, will rush to foreigners.

  • Expert urges review of airport security

    Expert urges review of airport security

    An aviation expert, Group Captain John Ojikutu (rtd) has urged the government to review security at the nation’s airports.

    He said this had become imperative in the face of the prevailing security challenges warning that the airports were vulnerable.

    Ojikutu, who is the Chief Executive Officer of Centurion Securities, said the issue should be addressed before  the United  States Federal Aviation Administration ( FAA ) team pay its recertification visit this month.  Government, he added, must quickly review the security programme to save it from embarrassment.

    He said stakeholders in the aviation sector are worried that the inadequacies identified by the U.S .FAA team  a few years ago may not have been addressed. This, according to him, has gravely  affected airports’ safety and security.

    Ojikutu, a former military commandant of the Murtala Muhammed International Airport, Lagos, said the challenge of accessing the airport has been worrisome because of the presence of many security and para-military personnel at the terminal building. He added that this has made it difficult to know which agency is in-charge to address any infraction  on safety and security.

    He said the team’s visit  may expose the nation’s airports security inadequacies urging that steps should   taken to improve the areas where lapses have been identified.

    Ojikutu said: “I do not think we are  really doing enough in airport security. Government needs to raise the bar on issues affecting security at the airport. First, it is important for government to review the aviation security programme for the airports and the entire system.

    “And we can only do that if the NCAA is allowed to do its job properly. I do not know what is going to be the focal point of the FAA reassessment, when it visits Nigeria this month. The team is programmed to be here based on the assessment it carried out on Nigeria. It is supposed to visit Nigeria to find out if the gaps identified in its previous audit have been rectified. The team needs to come and find out  how far Nigeria has gone about rectifying the gaps identified in the last  airport audit.”

    According to him, there is no timeline for reassessing any country. “Nigeria’s reassessment has become imperative because of the Boko Haram  challenge. The FAA team  needs to come around to find out the programme we had in Nigeria, the one available now and how the aviation system is handling the problem of insecurity.

    “If we cannot sustain the security programme, can we review it and what programme  do we have in place ? He asked rhetorically.

    The content of the security programme, he said,  is derived from the manual developed for the airport systems and airlines, adding that all airports and airlines are supposed to have a security programme.

    He said: “My worry has always been the Murtala Muhammed International Airport, especially the security programme in place at the airport . I have not seen enough being done about the Lagos Airport Road.”

    Some portions of the airport, Ojikutu said, ought to be closed to demarcate the airport perimeter fence from that of the security.

    “When ICAO came in 2004, it urged Nigeria to enhance the perimeter fence and the security fence, but nothing has happened since then. People are building into the runway, and I am tempted to ask if the airport has a survey plan,” he said.

    Concerning access into the airport, Ojikutu wondered who is actually in charge. “What is the regulation according to ICAO? We need to review the access control into the airport to properly define who is in charge. This has to be done in totality of the personnel in charge . The current system of having more personnel at the access point is not acceptable. The NCAA  is not fully in charge, because the Ministry of Aviation has hijacked the functions of NCAA because of political interference,” he said.

    According to Ojikutu, the Nigeria Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA) is not alive to its responsibilities.

    “Look at what happened in a few incidences at some  airports.The NCAA should ask the airlines involved to review its security programme to ensure safe operations. The regulator should wake up to its responsibility and ensure that operators comply with their security plan.

    “What is the regulator doing?”He asked, adding that the government should address the challenge of inadequate personnel in the sector.

    The failure to train more people, he noted,  could be a problem as the workforce is ageing without provision for replacement. This, he said,  is unhealthy for the growth and development of the industry.

    In 2006, according to Ojikutu, Nigerian Airspace Management Agency (NAMA) had a deficiency of 250 personnel, adding that  air traffic controllers are gravely inadequate.

    He said: “Why can’t government fix the Nigeria College of Aviation Technology, (NCAT) Zaria to train personnel for NAMA. Government is not doing enough in the training of aviation personnel. There was a Boeing 727 aircraft belonging to DHL that should have been used for fire simulation, the aircraft was sold out as scrap.

    “FAAN has a shortfall of 1,000 personnel in aviation security. This is a dangerous dimension, the structure on the ground is not good.”

    Government, he said,  should invest in the training of critical safety aviation personnel.

    “People with interest in aviation should be sent to NCAT for six months compulsory training in aviation to boost their knowledge of aviation. That way, the industry would be raising people who are knowledgable about the sector,” he suggested.

  • Expert warns against animal feeds contamination

    THE Dean, Faculty of Agriculture, University of Ilorin, Prof Abiodun Adeloye, has urged the government to ensure that animal feeds are free from contamination.

    Increased animal health challenges, he said, has raised the awareness of animal food safety that spotlighted the risks to the food chain.

    Adeloye stressed the need to improve surveillance and monitoring for contaminated feed.

    Animal feeds, according to him, required multiple raw materials mostly from crops grown in the farms. Many of the ingredients used by the animal feed industry are materials not used for human consumption or are products remaining after processing materials for human food, known as co-products for animal feed.

    The livestock Industry, he said, is faced with a variety of potential contaminants within the animal feed, mostly the contaminants come from incoming materials.

    For this reason, he maintained that it was important to assess the severity and probability of the potential contaminations in order to determine the actions required, if any, to control the potential risk.

    He called on feed manufacturers to focus on controlling contamination hazards, adding that feed samples from across the supply chain should be sent to laboratories to check for contaminants.

    He suggested that testing is performed at feed mills or even points of entry where feed materials enter the country.

    He urged the government to enforce safety procedures for the supply, handling, manufacture, storage and distribution of commercially produced feed for animals.

    According to him, lack of regulations to guide animal feedmanufacturers could threaten the livestock sector.

  • U.S doctor with Ebola improving, says Expert

    U.S doctor with Ebola improving, says Expert

    The condition of American Dr. Kent Brantly stricken with Ebola seems to have improved, the director of the Centre for Disease Control and Prevention said yesterday.

    Dr. Thomas Frieden said it was encouraging to see Dr. Brantly walk out of the ambulance unassisted when he arrived at Atlanta’s Emory University Hospital from Liberia at the weekend.

    Frieden said he understands the public’s concerns about Ebola, and the public health role is to ensure that the infection is not spread.

    The CDC chief said old-fashioned practices were required to stop the spread of Ebola in West Africa. These include finding the patients and their contacts, making sure they’re treated, educating the public and doing rigorous infection control in hospitals.

    Ebola is only spread through direct contact of bodily fluids.

    This current Ebola outbreak is the worst on record and has killed more than 700 in three countries in West African and infected more than 1,300.

    Before Brantly arrived in Atlanta, not much about his condition had been made public. According to Samaritan’s Purse, the aid organisation he was working for, Brantly was in “serious but stable” condition before being flown to the U.S.

    When the doctor was able to walk into the hospital, at least two experts said they were surprised but pleased that the doctor seemed to be doing well.

    This strain of the Ebola virus has a fatality rate of approximately 60 per cent and past outbreaks had fatality rates as high as 90 percent.

    Dr. William Schaffner, an infectious disease specialist at Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, said he felt “guardedly optimistic”, since Ebola usually advances quickly and Brantly had shown signs of the disease for at least a week.

    “The first thing we all said ‘Whao, he’s not on a vent,’” Schaffner said of realising that Brantly did not need a ventilator to help him breathe. “In general [with] Ebola is … you progress on a downhill course. If you’re at this point and you’re holding your own you’re entitled to be optimistic.”

    When the doctor was able to walk into the hospital, at least two experts said they were surprised but pleased that the doctor seemed to be doing well.

    This strain of the Ebola virus has a fatality rate of approximately 60 percent and past outbreaks had fatality rates as high as 90 percent.

    Morse said that Brantly was obviously not out of the woods and that he would be under constant monitoring to ensure his blood pressure, lung function, kidney function and other vitals remained steady.

    “If he really does get better, we want to know his secret,” Morse said.

    Doctors yesterday also spoke on how their infected colleague would be treated amid fears that  the outbreak killing more than 700 people in Africa could spread in the United States has generated considerable anxiety among some Americans.

    But infectious-disease experts said the public faces zero risk as Emory University Hospital treats a critically ill missionary doctor and a charity worker who were infected in Liberia.

    The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has received “nasty emails” and at least 100 calls from people saying “How dare you bring Ebola into the country!?” CDC Director Tom Frieden said Saturday.

    “I hope that our understandable fear of the unfamiliar does not trump our compassion when ill Americans return to the U.S. for care,” Frieden said.

    Dr. Kent Brantly and Nancy Writebol, who will arrive in this week, will be treated in Emory’s isolation unit for infectious diseases, created 12 years ago to handle doctors who get sick at the CDC, just up the hill. It is one of about four in the country, equipped with everything necessary to test and treat people exposed to very dangerous viruses.

    In 2005, it handled patients with SARS, which unlike Ebola can spread like the flu when an infected person coughs or sneezes.

    In fact, the nature of Ebola — which is spread by close contact with bodily fluids and blood — means that any modern hospital using standard, rigorous, infection-control measures should be able to handle it.

    Still, Emory won’t be taking any chances.

    “Nothing comes out of this unit until it is non-infectious,” said Dr. Bruce Ribner, who will be treating the patients. “The bottom line is: we have an inordinate amount of safety associated with the care of this patient. And we do not believe that any health-care worker, any other patient or any visitor to our facility is in any way at risk of acquiring this infection.”

    Brantly was flown from Africa to Dobbins Air Reserve base outside Atlanta in a small plane equipped to contain infectious diseases. The plane had briefly stopped in Maine to refuel.

    Bangor Mayor Ben Sprague confirmed that the plane landed Saturday morning at Bangor International Airport.

    He said airport staff, law enforcement and public health personnel were on alert in case anything went wrong, but it was a straightforward landing and refuel.

    At the Dobbins air base, a small police escort followed his ambulance to the hospital. He climbed out dressed head to toe in white protective clothing, and another person in an identical hazardous materials suit held both of his gloved hands as they walked gingerly inside.

    “It was a relief to welcome Kent home today. I spoke with him, and he is glad to be back in the U.S.,” said his wife, Amber Brantly, who left Africa with their two young children for a wedding in the United States days before the doctor fell ill.

    “I am thankful to God for his safe transport and for giving him the strength to walk into the hospital,” her statement said.

    Inside the unit, patients are sealed off from anyone who doesn’t wear protective gear.

    “Negative air pressure” means air flows in, but can’t escape until filters scrub any germs from patients. All laboratory testing is conducted within the unit, and workers are highly trained in infection control. Glass walls enable staff outside to safely observe patients, and there’s a vestibule where workers suit up before entering. Any gear is safely disposed of or decontaminated.

    Family members will be kept outside for now.

    The unit “has a plate glass window and communication system, so they’ll be as close as 1-2 inches from each other,” Ribner said.

    Dr. Jay Varkey, an infectious disease specialist who will be treating Brantly and Writebol, gave no word Saturday about their condition. Both were described as critically ill after treating Ebola patients at a missionary hospital in Liberia, one of three West African countries hit by the largest outbreak of the virus in history.

    There is no proven cure for the virus. It kills an estimated 60 per cent to 80 per cent of the people it infects, but American doctors in Africa say the mortality rate would be much lower in a functioning health-care system.

    The virus causes hemorrhagic fever, headaches and weakness that can escalate to vomiting, diarrhea and kidney and liver problems. Some patients bleed internally and externally.

    There are experimental treatments, but Brantly had only enough for one person, and insisted that his colleague receive it. His best hope in Africa was a transfusion of blood including antibodies from one of his patients, a 14-year-old boy who survived thanks to the doctor.

    There was also only room on the plane for one patient at a time. Writebol will follow this week.

    Dr. Philip Brachman, an Emory public health specialist who led the CDC’s disease detectives programme for many years, said since there is no cure, medical workers will try any modern therapy that can be done, such as better monitoring of fluids, electrolytes and vital signs.

    “We depend on the body’s defenses to control the virus,” Ribner said. “We just have to keep the patient alive long enough in order for the body to control this infection.”

    The plane carrying the second American patient left the U.S. for Liberia yesterday.

    The private air ambulance is scheduled to arrive in Liberia after one stopover. The plane will then bring aid worker Nancy Writebol to Dobbins Air Reserve Base in Marietta, Ga., and is expected to land midday tomorrow.

    The same plane brought Dr. Brantly to Georgia on Saturday

     

  • Expert to govt: reposition crop insurance scheme

    The Federal Government has been urged to reposition the crop insurance scheme to ameliorate losses that farmers incur from flood, drought and plant diseases.

    An expert, Prof Ayo Ogunlela, gave the advice during an interview with The Nation.

    Ogunlela, who is a professor of Agricultural and Biosystems Engineering at the University of Ilorin, said significant changes in weather could increase drought and flood in some parts of the country, as such farmers need to be protected.

    According to him, excessive rainfall and fluctuating temperatures could offer lead to seedling diseases on the farms.

    He is concerned that rainfall extremes that only occur at most a few times yearly, could have very large impact, adding that agriculture and farmers should be the priority of the government as improving their condition is a must to strengthen the economy.

    For experts, like him during critical crop growth stages, too many days without rain can reduce yields or lead to crop failure, which can reverberate through the agriculture-dependent economy. Also, short periods of very heavy rainfall can create disasters.

    To spur agricultural growth, Ogunlela asked the government to launch a comprehensive plan to provide a ‘Soil health card’ to all farmers across the country. The card will carry crop-wise recommendations of nutrients/fertiliser required for farms, making it possible for farmers to improve productivity by wisely using input.

    He said there should be computerised systems in local agriculture science centres to keep data of ‘soil test’ results, adding that thess will make the easy collection of oil samples from small farms in remote villages.

    The system will allow farmers to download the card using ‘unique number’ allotted to each soil sample. This way, any change in ownership of the particular farm land, will not create any problem in getting such cards or getting it updated, he added.

    He further said the move would help farmers in identifying ‘health of the soil’ which will go a long way in improving productivity through judicious use of fertiliser and water.

    Since collecting ‘soil samples’ and uploading/updating the test results will be a mammoth exercise, states will deploy students of agriculture universities in doing this, he said.

    All soil samples will be tested in various soil testing labs across the country. Thereafter, experts will analyse the strength and weaknesses (micro-nutrients deficiency) of the soil and suggest measures to deal with it. The result and suggestion will be displayed in the cards.

  • Use of consultants for tax collection by states, councils illegal, says expert

    A tax expert, Mr Mark Abuh, at the weekend, said that the use of consultants by some state governments and local government councils in the country to collect taxes and levies was illegal.

    Abuh, who is the Tax Adviser to Growth and Empowerment in States (GEM3), a Department for International Development (DFID) sponsored programme, made the disclosure in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja.

    He said that the use of consultants in tax collection has become a trend, but described it as an “aberration”, which was being done at the detriment of appropriate government officials.

    He added that “Decree 21 of 1998 prohibits the use of consultants for assessing and collecting taxes and levies by any tier of government.”

    Abuh also said that the use of consultants by some state and local governments was one of the factors that led to multiple taxation of citizens and organisations.

    According to him: “Section 1(1) states that notwithstanding anything contained in the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1979, as amended, or in any other enactment or law, no person, other than the appropriate tax authority, shall assess or collect tax or levy.”

    He stressed that “nobody, other than appropriate government agency and officials, shall on behalf of government, collect tax or levy as listed in the Schedule to this decree.

    He quoted again: “Sub-section 2 states that no person, including a tax authority, shall mount a road block in any part of the federation for the purpose of collecting any tax or levy.”

    The tax expert pointed out that the Tax Act provides that the Board of Internal Revenue in a state could delegate some of its non-core functions to tax consultants “but not for the assessment and actual collection.

  • Expert canvasses enhanced application of ADR mechanisms

    The growth of Africa’s economy and its increasing relevance in the global environment is dependent on its capacity to negotiate and utilise quick, effective, equitable and economically viable dispute resolution alternatives, an alternative dispute resolution (ADR) expert, Mr. Kehinde Aina has said.

    Aina, who is the founder of  and Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Negotiation and Conflict Management Group (NCMG) International spoke at the presentation of certificate of incorporation of the University of Lagos(UNILAG)-NCMG College of Negotiation (College of Negotiation), a joint initiative of UNILAG and the NCMG.

    He said the college seeks to focus on increasing the competence with which people, corporations and governments deal with disputes and decision-making, while promoting social order and economic development in the country and Africa.

    Aina explained that the college, “a product of over seven years of planning, negotiation and resource mobilisation, is the only institution of higher education in the country, devoted to the study, teaching and research in the field of negotiation, mediation, arbitration and conflict management mechanisms.

    The college, which he said is modeled after the Harvard Program on Negotiation, will foster a mix of top academic and practical learning experience.

    Aina said the college is in the process of commencing Masters Programmes in Legal Studies, Dispute Resolution and Conflict Management.

    “Each programme is a four-semester, part time programme, targeted at senior managers, legislators, public and civil servants, government officials, professionals and business executives,” he said.

     

  • Expert tasks govt on farm centres, marketing boards

    Alhaji Ibrahim Isa, an expert in cotton farming and member of the National Cotton Association of Nigeria (NACOTAN), has advised the Federal Government to re-introduce farm centres and produce marketing boards.

    Isa made the appeal in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) at the weekend in Funtua, Katsina State.

    He said that establishing farm centres with skilled extension workers to educate farmers, would improve yield while the marketing boards would guarantee good pricing.

    Besides, the farmer said that both measure would increase the roles of the produce inspection department, to ensure grading and facilitate the achievement of the desired results.

    The expert said that adulteration of the commodity constituted an impediment to cotton business growth in the country.

    He decried the increase in cases of cotton adulteration with water, sand, dust, wood, metallic objects and other items designed to increase the weight.

    He cautioned cotton farmers against all forms of adulteration to ensure the commodity’s global acceptance and called on research institutes to live up to the obligation on seed quality.

    Isa, a former staff of the defunct Northern States Marketing Board, urged the Federal Government to emulate other countries such as the U.S.

    Cameroon and Benin Republic in the area of cotton production policies, to ensure maximum gain and success in the business.

    According to him, policy change has also brought setbacks.

    He underscored the need to constitute rehabilitation, consultation, seed development and management revolving fund committees including cotton farmers.

    He expressed concern that merchants, ginners recorded high gains at the expense of the peasant farmers and further urged the government to redouble efforts in check-mating textile import as well as dumping of used materials in the country.

    “At present, commodity farmers are left at the mercy of commodity merchants and other stakeholders with commercial interest associated with cotton,” Isa said.

    While commending the federal and state governments toward supporting farmers, he urged cotton farmers to embrace modern farming techniques and post-harvest procedures.

    He lauded President Goodluck Jonathan’s Agricultural Transformation Agenda and described the policy as a good development toward attaining agricultural growth.

  • Security expert explains how to combat terrorism

    Renowned security expert, Dr Ona Ekhomu, has advised the military to deploy force multipliers in the fight against Boko Haram terrorists. He said the call became necessary as military personnel resources were needed to arrest terrorist atrocities in Borno, Adamawa and Yobe States with new strategies in the war against terror.

    Ekhomu explained that in recent deadly attacks in the Madagali in Adamawa State, and Gwoza, Damboa, Chibok and Kondugha areas in Borno State, the terrorists showed adaptive capacity, choosing to carry out attacks in communities, villages and towns, while avoiding military patrols that tended to concentrate on the highways.

    He said that security forces must utilise force multipliers in order to increase their effectiveness in arresting the wanton killing of innocent souls by Boko Haram terrorists.

    In a release, the security expert lamented that recent Boko Haram attacks were becoming more brazen and deadly as he sympathised with the victims of the attack on the Catholic Church in Chakawa Village, Madagali, Adamawa State, which resulted in the mass murder of 35 persons, among others.

    Ekhomu, who is President of Association of Industrial and Safety Operators of Nigeria (AISSON), said to protect neighbours of the mountainous Gwoza Local Government Area in Borno State and Madagali, security forces must use force multipliers which include specialised security tips, customised intelligence operations, perception management and aerial rapid response.

    He said: “Multiplier is a capability that when added and employed by a combat force, significantly increases its combat potential and enhances the chance of its success.”

    Ekhomu sought the use of helicopters in deploying response forces in the mountainous region, noting that some terrorists’ convoys were being mistaken for those of politicians in the zones. He said political campaign convoys should be banned in the states under emergency rule until the terrorists are routed out.

  • Expert seeks usage of renewable energy

    Expert seeks usage of renewable energy

    Allowing farmers to use renewable energy technology on their farmers will help the nation meet its future food and energy needs, Director Africa Region, Cassava Adding Value for Africa (CAVA), Dr Kola Adebayo has said.

    By generating on-farm electricity, he said farmers would be able to cut the costs of producing food and more likely to remain in business.

    He said farms could be encouraged to explore renewable energy generation at any level or scale, as some have the land and the capacity to install those renewable energy schemes.

    He said some farms have all the conditions necessary to generate power from renewable sources to support economic growth and development.

    He stressed however that government needs to carry out extensive enlightenment campaign on the benefits of renewal energy.

    He said most of the wastes generated in the country were biodegradable and could be harnessed for power generation to support the industry and economic development.

    He said farms could overturn the unsustainable practice of dumping waste into the sea and explore opportunities for establishing a cyclical system to make waste management regenerative and eco-friendly.

    He said running a farm business with rising costs and fluctuating returns was very unstable.

    He added that sharp rises in the cost of energy were difficult to absorb, especially for farmers operating on tight margins but “wind energy is where you can get ahead of that curve.”

    He said farmers could also be in the business of renewable energy. He added that if generating renewable energy helped a farm to remain in business then it also helped maintain food supplies and food security.”The idea of farmers diversifying into ‘pure energy’ as well as food energy makes a whole lot of sense.

    He said the government could help jobs creation in rural communities and encourage the development of energy efficiency and renewable energy production from wind, solar, biomass and biofuels in farms and rural businesses.

    He said there is need to preserve investments in programmes that provide beginning farmers with education and training, access to credit, and access to affordable land.