Tag: families

  • Akwa Ibom governor’s wife empowers 200 multiple-birth families

    The wife of Akwa Ibom State Governor, Mrs Martha Udom Emmanuel, has empowered more than two hundred multiple-birth families across the state with cash and gift items during the multiple birth programme which held at the civil service auditorium, Idongesit Nkanga secretariat, Uyo on Friday.

    Speaking at the maiden edition of the programme, the governor’s wife said the empowerment became necessary to assist the families cope with the demands of raising multiple children. She advised the multiple birth families to accept the children as a source of blessing and not otherwise. She also appreciated her predecessor, Mrs. Unoma Akpabio for initiating the project saying “Today is a great day, I recognize my predecessor for initiating this programme, without her vision, we would not be here.”

    The State’s First Lady called on the beneficiaries’ husbands to support and encourage their wives to be involved in trade, remarking that “no matter how little the money is, start something, and make sure it multiplies.” She however informed the beneficiaries that there will be a monitoring team charged with the responsibility of overseeing how well they are managing  the resources given them.

    Speaking earlier, the coordinator of the programme, Mrs. Ime Ephraim Inyang appreciated the Governor’s wife for sustaining the programme describing her as a mother with a golden heart. She noted that the continuation of the project by the wife of governor was to empower the multiple-birth mothers to be economically dependable, adding that the empowerment of women remains paramount in this administration.

    In appreciation, three beneficiaries from the three senatorial districts thanked the governor’s wife for her benevolence and show of love for the multiple birth families in the state praying that God will guide and  sustain her good works.

    A health talk on hygiene and nutrition was given to the parents of multiple births by a Chief nursing officer, Mrs. Christy Akpan.

    There were goodwill messages from the Commissioner for Women Affairs and Social Welfare, Dr. Glory Edet, and wife of the SSG,  Mrs. Gloria Umoren.

    Those in attendance were  Commissioner for  Science and Technology Dr. Elizabeth Obot, wife of the Speaker, Mrs. Ememobong Uko, female transition chairmen and wives of transition chairmen.

  • Mecca accident: Families of Nigerian victims to get N70m each

    Families of the six Nigerian pilgrims who died in the last Friday crane collapse at the Makkah grand Mosque are to get N70 million each.
    Custodian of the two Holy Mosques, King Salman Bin Abdulaziz Al Saud who disclosed this on Tuesday has also ordered that top officials of the Saudi Binladin Group be banned from traveling outside the kingdom after the construction company was partially blamed for Friday’s deadly crane crash in Makkah.
    Saudi authority said families of each of the 111 people who lost their lives in the accident be paid compensation of (SR1,000,000) one million Saudi Riyals.
    One Saudi Riyal is presently equivalent to 70 Nigerian Naira.
    According to Saudi local newspaper, Arab News, ‘King Salman ordered the payment of the following to the families of the victims: SR1,000,000 to the family of each person killed in this accident; SR1,000,000 to each injured whose injury resulted in permanent disability; SR500,000 to each of the other injured.”
    According to the report, such payment would not deprive the families of the deceased as well as the injured from the right to claim for private right before the competent judicial authorities.
    [ad id=”403656″]”The king also issued directives to host two family members of the deceased as the king’s guests to perform Hajj next year.
    “The injured who cannot perform Haj this year can perform Hajj next year as the king’s guests. The families of the injured who stay in hospitals for treatment shall be granted visit visas to take care of the injured during the remaining period of Hajj and return back to their country,” the royal court said.
    A royal court announcement carried by the Saudi Press Agency (SPA) said the king is reviewing the report of the Accident Investigation Committee, which suggested negligence on the part of the Saudi Binladin Group, but concluded that it found an “absence of criminal suspicion.”
    The report said “the main reason for the accident is the strong winds while the crane was in a wrong position.”
    Some 111 people were killed and 331 injured when the giant crane being used in the expansion project at the Grand Mosque toppled and crashed into a portion of the mataf (circumambulation area) around the holy Kaaba on Sept. 11.
    Pending completion of the investigation, all members of the Board of Directors of Binladin Group, as well as Bakr bin Mohammed bin Ladin and senior executives in the group and others connected with the project are banned from leaving the kingdom, said the royal court order.

  • Lagos families defend client accused of land grabbing

    Lagos families defend client accused of land grabbing

    • ’Police should keep away from our land’

    The Orebiyi and Bakare families of Eti Osa Local Government Area in Lagos State have dismissed media reports branding Alhaji Jubrin Okelewu, Chief Executive Officer of Rest and Joy Nigeria Limited, Lagos, as a land grabber.

    The two families said at a press conference in Lagos that they sold an expanse of land to Okelewu’s Rest and Joy Nigeria Limited at Ogombo/Olokonla in the Eti-Osa Local Government Area between 2003 and 2005.

    Spokesmen for the families, Chief Findiu Ajani Oyekunle and Mr. Basheer Olayinka Bakare-Odedina, said they were

    the rightful owners of the land, but sold it to Alhaji Okelewu.

    “He is now the rightful owner of the land. How can somebody grab what he owns?” they said.

    On the crisis over  the land, the families said: “On May 30, at about 11am, about 50 armed policemen led by DSP A.A. Taiwo stormed the land in question, destroying buildings and fences with bulldozers. They also brought a Black Maria to take people away.

    “When we questioned their leader, he said the order was from above. We then asked for documents in connection with the demolition, but he could not produce them. He was just telling us that the order to demolish was from above.

    “While questioning them, an argument ensued. In the course of the argument, they started shooting and people were running helter-skelter. Many people, including old men, were injured.

    “Their leader claimed to have come from the Lagos State Taskforce on Environmental Offences and Enforcement Unit, but he could not produce any document to back up their action.

    “We reported the case at the Area J Police Station and this was followed by a petition to the Inspector of Police, Solomon Arase, through Rita O. Opuoru & Co, our barristers and solicitors. All what we are now saying are in the petition to the Inspector General of Police.

    “As a result of the petition, the genuine owner of the land, Alhaji Okelewu, was invited to a meeting at the X-Squad, Alagbon, Lagos, on August 7, where he was arrested and taken to Abuja on the order of the Deputy Inspector General in charge of the Force Criminal Investigation Department, Danazuma Doma. On August 11, he was returned to the Federal SARS at Adeniji Adele where he was locked up again before his release on August 14.”

    They declared that any other person laying claim to the land has had no business with them and that the “ Lagos State Government did not allocate our land to anybody.”

    “The only portion the Lagos State Government requested for out of our land had been given to it and they have not even compensated us.

    “We are now telling the whole world that Alhaji Jubrin Okelewu of Rest and Joy Nigeria Limited is the genuine owner of the said land. He is not a land grabber at all. He is our client, and we are ready to defend him before the Lagos State Government or any court of law in the country. We are imploring the police to keep away from our land”, they said.

    Alhaji Okelewu, in his own contribution, said: “I bought the land from the families as they have said. I am a genuine and God-fearing businessman. I am a patriotic Nigerian working for the progress of the country through my business. I am not a land grabber. The land belongs to me.

    “I was arrested and detained over my property. While my application for the excision of the land was receiving attention in the ministry, they came to invade it.”

    As the conference was going on, we got a report that about 10 armed policemen and some surveyors had invaded the land again.

    The leader of the police team told Alhaji Okelewu that they were acting in accordance with the order from above, but they could not produce any document to back up their action.

  • Buhari seeks quick re-unification of displaced families

    President Muhammadu Buhari yesterday directed the Ministry of Special Duties and Inter-Governmental Affairs to intensify efforts to re-unite families whose members  are currently scattered in different camps for Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs).

    He spoke after receiving a briefing from the Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Special Duties, Dr. Jamila Shu’ara, at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    Buhari, in a statement by the Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, Garba Shehu, also called for a follow-up  on the supervision and audit of constituency projects.

    Expressing concern about the well-being of children in the camps, he said that appropriate mechanisms must be put in place to ensure the proper up-bringing of the children so that they don’t grow up to become another national problem.

    Officials of the Ministry of the Federal Capital Territory (MFCT) also briefed President Buhari and Vice President Yemi Osinbajo at the State House.

     

  • Law underway to help families of late political heroes, says Sani

    Law underway to help families of late political heroes, says Sani

    A legislation design to properly take care of families of the nation’s late political heroes will soon be proposed at the National Assembly.

    The Senator representing Kaduna Central, Shehu Sani, said this when he visited the families of late Malam Aminu Kano, former governor of Kano State, late Sabo Bakinzuwo and Alhaji Mudi Sipikin in Kano yesterday.

    The families of the heroes, he said, were “abandoned and nothing was done for them to show appreciation on the contributions they made” for the nation’s political development.

    “I feel mandated to come here and pay my respect to the bases of our political foundation. As a child, I have always looked forward to emulating politics with ideology, sincerity and unity, which these people taught us.

    “They have lived simple and straight lives that have shaped our political trend. Unfortunately, these people are only remembered in words and not in actions. Their families were left to fate. This we will not allow and we will ensure that we have enact laws that will find these families and do something about their plight,”  Sani said.

    The families he visited expressed their appreciation over the intention of the senator.

    Bakinzuwo was a governor in Kano for three months during the Second Republic in 1983, and Sipikin was one of the seven politicians, who formed the defunct Northern Elements Progressive Union (NEPU).

  • Land tears families apart

    Two families, Okoronwiro and Nwankwo-Eje, in Umuhu, Orumba North Local Government Area of Anambra State, have fallen out over the ownership of a parcel of land and the economic trees on it.

    In 2003 the Okoronwiro family put up an advertorial in a newspaper claiming joint ownership of the land as well as the allied items on it.

    But in a counter claim, the Nwa-nkwo-Eje family led by Geoffrey E. Nwankwo debunked the co-ownership posture, adding that such claim should be retracted.

    He warned that any member of the public who had anything to do with the land, economic trees and other properties in Umuhu, Umunebo village without consulting the Nwankwo-Eje Family would have themselves to blame.

    He maintained that any such transaction shall be null and void and of no consequence.

    Nwankwo noted that the family historically, were the occupants and direct descendants of Umuhua-gorom clan or dynasty, adding that no other in Umunebo village of Uvumegbenadiji Ufuma.

    Furthermore, he claimed that the Okoronwiro descendants were incorporated in Umuhu dynasty by the Nwankwo-Eje, adding that the terms reached in the years had been abandoned.

    He said that the said article was void in associating Nwankwo-Eje family with any pre-occupation and indiscriminate land deal or sale of economic trees that were jointly owned by both families.

    This, according to the family was inciting, libelous and scandalous, in bad faith, mischievous as well as laced with ulterior motive and falsification of history.

    They said that all rights and privileges pertaining to the Umuhu dynasty and its property in Oha Agbada, Iyi Ogwugwu, Ugwu-ajirija, Nkwa, Ugwuagadinwanyi, Oguro, Osum, Anaocha, Isig-wuikpa, Ohe Uno, Ohe agu and Oriehi rest and belonged to the Nwankwo-Eje Family.

  • Freed Boko Haram victims reunite with families

    About 158 victims, mostly women and children, who were released by Boko Haram insurgents in Yobe State last month, re-united with their families in Damaturu yesterday.

    They were unconditionally released by the militias near the Buni Yadi Gujba Road and had been in the custody of the Joint Task Force (JTF) for medical and physical examination until yesterday when they were released to their families at a mini ceremony in Damaturu.

    Speaking at the event organised by the Special Committee on Rehabilitation of Victims of Insurgency, the Chairman, Ahmed Mustapha Goniri, said the freed victims were in sound health, adding that the JTF in conjunction with his committee and medical experts examined their mental, psychological and medical conditions.

    Relief materials were given to the freed victims.

    Goniri said: “Of the 158 that were freed, 62 are adults and the rest are children. Of the 62 adults, there are 15 widows among them. The  government, as part of its resolve to alleviate their sufferings, gave each of the widows two bags of rice, one bag of sugar, two cartons of Idomie noddles, wrappers and N50,000. Others will receive the same quantity of items and N30,000 each.”

    He thanked the parents for their patience when the victims undergone screening in the hands of security operatives.

    The freed victims from Katarko village in Gujba Local Government, one of the strongholds of Boko Haram insurgents, were happy for regaining freedom.

    Abdulrahaman Dauda, who received his wife and  three children, said he was happy over the re-union. He, however, said two of his children were still in the captivity of the Boko Haram militias.

    His words: “I thank God because today I have reunied with my wife and three of my children. But my joy will not be complete until two of my sons in the captivity of Boko Haram are released. I pray that they will return safely.”

    Aisha Dauda said she was happy to come out of the Boko Haram den alive and reunite with her husband.

  • Succour for families of late neighbourhood watchers

    For the families of deceased members of the Lagos State’ community security outfit, the Neighbourhood Watchers, the labours of their lost loved ones have not been in vain.

    The Lagos State Government in recognition of the services rendered to the state by these Neighbourhood Watchers some of whom died between 2013 and last year, recently donated N250,000 each to the bereaved to cushion the effect of the loss of their bread winners.

    One of the beneficiaries, 23-year –old Saheed Kobomoje lost his father Sulaimon Kobomoje  in February last year.  Following his father’s death, Saheed has been the breadwinner of the family and together with his mother has been doing menial jobs to sustain their family. He was particularly grateful to the Lagos State Government for the assistance.

    Like the Kobomojes, other beneficiaries were full of thanks for the government for the support as they relived their ordeals since the death of their fathers to The Nation.

    While making the presentation to the families on behalf of the Lagos State Government, the Commissioner for Rural Development Hon. Cornelius Ojelabi expressed the government’s condolence and thanked the deceased for sacrificing their lives, time and family to protect their community.

    The token amount, he said was just to sustain the families and urged them to invest it wisely to yield results in no time.

    “These men have in their little ways contributed their quotas to the development of Lagos State. This reward is coming because their services were appreciated and noted by the government.

    “This is just our own token show of appreciation for the services the late watchers rendered and served diligently as neighborhood watchers. The money is meant to support the family for the service their fathers rendered to Lagos State while alive.”

    The Commissioner urged the bereaved to individually and collectively look inward to know what they can do for themselves outside government.

    A total of 20 families benefited from the gesture, they include: the lates Olufemi Ajayi; Saheed Sanusi: Adisa Bello; Adekunle Daramola; Ezekiel Akinbami; Sunday Ogunlaja; Oladimeji Olabisi.

    To the widows and children, the money will come handy in establishing and investing in a trade to sustain their families.

    There were other peculiar cases of serving watchers who were down with one form of ailment or the other. They were given N500,000 each to assist them with their treatment.

    While Mr Job Adikwu has spinal cord injury, 47 year old Owolabi Odufuwa has kidney problem.

     

  • ‘Over 1000 police families to receive compensation soon’

    Over 1,000 families of Nigerian police officers and men who died or sustained injury during active service between 2012 and last year will soon receive adequate compensation, The Nation has learnt.

    The victims are those who were not covered as a result of the non-payment of insurance premium on the Group Life Assurance Scheme of Federal Government workers to insurers following the enforcement of ‘No premium, no cover’ policy by the National Insurance Commission (NAICOM) in the insurance industry.

    Assistant Commissioner of Police and Head Insurance Department, Nigeria Police Force, Kayode Turner disclosed this in an interview with The Nation.

    He said the Inspector-General of Police Mohammed Abubakar had been working with the Budget  Office to pay the affected families.

    He said following the enforcement of the ‘No premium, no cover’ policy’by NAICOM, the money to be paid to the families cannot be termed as insurance claims any longer but compensation because no premium was paid to the insurers.

    Turner assured that going forward, premium on police Group Life Assurance Scheme will be paid up front.

    He noted that the police presently have insurance cover running for the year, as insurance premium has been fully paid.

    He believes premium should not be tied to quarterly allocation of the budget releases.

    He however stated that NAICOM ought to give a special concession to the police and other security forces in paying their premium owing to the nature of their job and the time when the Federal Government budget allocation is released, knowing full well that premiums are paid from the budget which comes every January after most of these polices may have been due.

    workers in Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs), such as the Nigeria Police Force (NPF), Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Federal Ministry of Education, and Federal Ministry of Justice, Federal Ministry of Power, among others, who die in active service are not eligible to get compensation.

    The Pension Reform Act states in Section 9(3) that employers shall maintain life insurance policy in favour of their employees for a minimum of three times the annual total emolument of the employee.

     

     

  • How power surge rendered families homeless in Ekiti

    How power surge rendered families homeless in Ekiti

    The recent increase in fire outbreaks caused by power surge has left some families homeless and helpless in Ekiti State, raising questions about who cares for the victims of disaster in our society. SULAIMAN SALAWUDEEN reports.  

    The family of Mr. Agbesusi Gbenga, a staff of the Federal Information Office in Ado-Ekiti, Ekiti State, had lived together for over four years in a two bedroom apartment at No. 50 Oke Oniyo street, in the capital until about two month ago when a supposed surge in electricity supply from an electricity distribution company reduced their apartment to rubble.

    Safe the few items which the five-member family went out with in the morning of the fateful day, including the family car, the dresses they had on and few other items, all valuables in their apartment including electronics, books belonging both to the parents and the children, academic and professional certificates, and many others went with an inferno which reportedly started about 1 pm but which had ruined the habitation before thick, black smoke oozed from the rooftops (of the apartment) to alert neighbours around 4pm.

    There were also reports of the intervention of the state fire department, but this came only too late. A visit to the scene by The Nation third day after the incident revealed charred debris of several burnt objects in an apartment the rooftops of which had also burnt sufficiently to make the skies viewable from most spots within.

    “My children’s text books were all burnt. See them; see our clothes; see the Plasma TV”. He kept pointing at objects as sympathies mounted.

    The grieving Agbesusi took The Nation round the scene of loss, pointing to charred heaps of assorted garbage lying here and there about the place. “My entire accomplishments in life, my certificates and that of my wife, everything, were burnt, everything”. He lamented

    Does he consider outside supports desirable? Yes, he does. He explained he had written letters to the State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA), the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA), and other similar agencies both at the state and local governments, but has not received responses from any as at the time of writing this report.

    But Agbesusi, being a public servant, has a steady source of livelihood which makes his story far better than that of Mama Austin, a single mother who nearly three years ago also had her habitation gutted.

    Mama Austin, as she is popularly called, now hawks boiled groundnuts about town, the proceeds of which had continued to offer her five-member family what they consider a livelihood.

    “My children eat twice in a day now”, she said, adding “Things were not like this when I was doing well in my (fresh fish) business. Now, there are times they will eat and nothing will be left for me to eat. I used to be well to do. Ask anyone around Okesa about me they will tell you. I had money and the business was moving well. The fire came and my comfort ended with it. I was not the only one affected that time. We were many. The entire building burnt that time”, Mama Austin said.

    She disclosed she also wrote several letters and visited many government offices, dishing out photographs of the burnt building to no avail.

    “I kept moving from one office to another. When you get here, they ask for pictures, when you get there, it is the same pictures. But all the efforts I made brought nothing”, she said.

    Speaking further, she said “After some efforts, I decided to stay with my God. He knows why what has happened has happened. Since then I have remained with nothing. I sell boiled groundnut to feed my children now”.

    Prevalence of electrical surges and yet no palliatives?

    Power/electrical surges are however more common in Ado-Ekiti than the experiences of the two victims. From Okeyinmi to Adebayo down to Basiri on Ado-Iyin road, victims recall their experiences and their loses regarding the inconsistencies of electrical supplies by the distribution companies, a situation which seemed to have become accepted as normal and consequently tolerated.

    “Last year”, recalled Tunde Babatunde, “surges occurred around Ajilosun, Bangboye, Ureje, and other areas along Ikere road, for one whole week, destroying electrical appliances of many residents”.

    The surge which he said occurred in the early morning of one Saturday ruptured appliances including freezers, fridges, TV sets, radio and video systems, electrical bulbs, standing and ceiling fans, air conditioners, among whole lot others.

    Tunde said: The surges lasted a whole week: I mean everyday of the week. It started on a Saturday and many of us were around. Thick smoke came from so many houses at the same time that we thought a bang would follow. The surge destroyed every electrical appliance we all had at the time. Those who were not around the day it started were caught on other days. Many things running into millions of naira were consumed. We approached the NEPA (PHCN)  people at the time but no help came. They pretended they did not even understand us”.

    The factor of illegal connections

    The Public Relations Officer, Benin Electricity Distribution Company (BEDC) covering Ondo and Ekiti states, Mr. Ilori Kayode-Brown, who attributed the surges to too many illegal wiring and connections in the communities, clarified that “as yet, the Company has no structure or plan to offer victims any form of assistance. It may be possible tomorrow. But today, there is nothing like palliatives for supposed victims of power surges.”

    Ilori explained that residents across the communities were in the habit of illegally increasing the number of phases they obtained. “They would apply for and obtain a single phase (power source) but would increase same to two or three using unlicensed artisans and substandard products”, he said.

    His words: “So many of our consumers have been discovered to increase the phases they obtained officially through crooked means. They would apply and obtain one phase and after such has been fixed by our office, they go behind and increase it by themselves to three. The end of it most times is always devastating”.

    According to him, potential customers were often advised to contact licensed contractors to certify the wiring of their houses to ensure things were done properly, adding that “wiring houses is not the responsibility of the electricity distribution company”.

    His words: “Experience has shown however that because the customers want to cut corners, they seek unlicensed but cheaper contractors. When things go wrong and fire occurs, they blame things on us.

    “Mistakes done by unlicensed wiring contractors caused upsurges most times. When people increase the phases through which they get supply, problem can occur and they still blame things on us. Our brief is to supply electricity, not to wire or electrify houses”, Brown said.

    But Mr. Ayoade Abiodun, electrical installation specialist in Ado Ekiti however maintained it was wrong to attribute all surges to illegal connections by so-called unprofessional wiring practitioners.

    Accordoing to him, “All power surges have their source from the transformers which are owned by the distribution companies. Electrical supplies from the source are first received by the transformers before people can receive it in their houses. If a transformer has any fault, it will show it by supplying low current, high current or fluctuating current. Other times it may bring no current. Who should rectify faults in the transformers when they develop faults? All the three situations except when there is no light at all can cause damages”, he said.

    He admitted that some of the contractors desirous of cutting corners, use sub-standard products often for unsuspecting customers which do aid faults in connections, adding “But it will be wrong to say that the surges owe always to illegal connections”.

    Ayoade maintained there were times when officials of the company disconnect electrical sources to homesteads but do it in such a hurry and shoddy manner that some of the cables would fall on other cables which do cause problems for residents as well”.

    Disaster responses by agencies

    But disasters, according to officials of agencies responsible for their management could be controlled or curtailed and victims offered palliatives, even up to 50 per cent of their destroyed valuables.

    The Agencies, specifically National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) and State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA) have always existed and do make claims of instituting palliatives for the needful across the state.

    Findings have however shown that many haven’t, as yet, felt their impact and/or relevance and those who do have recounted experiences of failed bids to secure succor from them when needed.

    In an interaction, the General Manager, SEMA, Mr. Femi Osasono, speaking through Mrs. Adebanjo Adebanke, clarified that the Agency may not restore valuables burnt or consumed in disaster situations wholesale but provide materials and supports as assessed necessary to keep victims going to cope minimally with life without suffering or experiencing neglect.

    His words: “We don’t build houses for people if such gets burnt, but there are what we call palliative measures. We visit the places with specialists from other ministries, departments and agencies (MDAs) and make assessments.

    “In a situation in which you have entire habitation destroyed either by fire or flood or any other thing, we have makeshift areas for victims’ immediate resettlement. This is to allow them cope with life minimally. Materials including mattresses, clothing materials, food stuffs and some cash assistance are supplied them.

    “That is if the victim happens to be a tenant. If it is the house owner, we give him cement, cash assistance, nails, and roofing sheets, even planks up to 50 per cent of valued cost of repairs.

    In cases of agricultural loses, Osasono added that the Agency partners agric departments who would visit the farms and make assessments. “It is an inter-ministry agency. We don’t work alone. So we network, depending on the situation, Agriculture, health, environment, even State Environmental Protection Agency (SEPA) in cases of cholera outbreak”, he said.

    Also, according to Mrs Ojo Bolanle, Assistant Head, Ekiti Operations Office of NEMA, covering Ekiti, Ondo and Osun states, disaster management is more effective in communities and situations where the first responder (the first to notice the occurrence) acted promptly and usefully to alert others and institute help moves.

    She noted residents in the communities are always encouraged to be alert to occurrences around them to be helpful during outbreaks.

    Her words: “If my kitchen caught fire in my absence, if my neighbour responds promptly, we may not need other secondary responder which we as an Agency are. But rather than wait and allow situations to get worse, people are always encouraged to dial 122 and a response will come promptly’, Ojo said.

    Are sensitisation programmes yielding enough?

    Findings by The Nation across communities reveal many were yet to know of the presence of Agencies involved in instituting palliatives for the needy lot in situations, despite the claims by both SEMA and NEMA of “a lot of sensitisation and enlightenment programmes’.

    ”We go out often to warn people about disasters”, Osasono said, adding “We also do jingles on radio and TV to raise awareness in communities, most especially on fire and flood outbreaks. In this regard, the current administration has been very supportive and forthcoming in its responses to requests from our Agency”.