Tag: India

  • ‘Our India story, by dog-bite victim’s father

    ‘Our India story, by dog-bite victim’s father

    It is a tragic story with a happy ending. When four-year-old Omonigho Abraham was almost devoured by two Alsatian dogs last November, many thought the worst had happened.

    The dogs chewed off the boy’s scalp and almost left him for dead in his father’s apartment in Igando, a Lagos suburb.

    Last December, he was flown to India for further treatment.

    Little Omonigho returned home last Thursday hale and hearty.

    His highly-elated father Odia Abraham said the treatment the boy had  in India could  not be compared to what he was getting here before being flown out.

    During a thank you visit to a private broadcast station, Television Continental (TVC), monitored in Lagos, Abraham said Nigeria has a long way to go to meet modern-day health challenges.

    According to him, there seems to be dearth of medical personnel to attend effectively to patients.

    Omonigho and his elder brothers were playing in their compound before he was attacked by the dogs. His brothers escaped.

    He was admitted at the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital (LASUTH) before being moved to India.

    In India, Abraham said his boy was monitored thrice daily, but in LASUTH, it was twice weekly.

    “While one physician was attached to him in Nigeria, six physicians were attached to him in India. We really need to upgrade our health institution,” he said.

    Abraham thanked the Lagos and Delta state governments for their assistance towards the Indian trip.

    He also appreciated non-governmental organisations and the media for their support.

    Omonigho’s mother, Mrs Helen Abraham could not hide her joy seeing her son back hale and hearty.

    The boy, she said, is due back in India in a few weeks for check-up. She thanked Nigerians for their prayers.

  • India’s growth to have impact on Africa next year

    With just days to go for the year to end, a new study has projected a steady growth in India, which from every indication is likely to have some impact on its dealings with Africa which is also being seen as a growth zone next year.

    The Standard Chartered Bank’s Global Research team has projected India to be “a positive surprise” compared to the situation in other parts of the globe.

    “More importantly, sentiment is also rising sharply due to changes made by the new government to reduce red tape and promote investment,” the team said.

    Former Federation of India Chambers of Commerce and Industry (Ficci) president R.V. Kanoria said earlier this year that the Indian government has been proactive in its commitment to encourage investment in Africa.

    “Indian investments in Africa have increased 14-fold in the past year and we are hoping that by next year it will rise to $100 billion,” he said.

    In addition to investment, India has also been active in capacity building and knowledge sharing, particularly in the area of private public participation (PPP) across the continent.

    Indian officials say, the public sector in India has partnered with the private sector to bridge the infrastructure gap resulting in 50 percent private investment.

    With more than a 1,000 PPP projects, India is said to have perfected the PPP model, which could arguably provide a solution to Africa’s infrastructural deficit.

    Emmanuel Mbi Ahas, African Development Bank’s (AfDB) first vice-president and chief operating officer, expressed Africa’s desire to learn from India and the AfDB’s will to support such efforts.

    India’s success story in the implementation of the PPP model makes it an important partner in facilitating its adoption in Africa. Analysts at the AfDB say India is one of the developing countries to have successfully received a large-scale investment to the tune of $300 billion in infrastructure under the PPP model.

    According to them, the Indian government has signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with the African Development Bank Group to share the model agreements and legal documents associated with PPPs to facilitate implementation of this model in African countries. This gives some hope for the continent in the coming year.

  • China, India, 198 others at Abuja fair

    Traders and exhibitors from the Republic of China, India and 198 other countries are participating at the Ninth Abuja International Trade Fair.

    President, Abuja Chamber of Commerce, Industry, Mines and Agriculture (ABUCCIMA), Solomon Nyagba said the fair, which began yesterday, will end on October 6.

    He said: “The reason we are targeting SMEs as our theme is because they are the engine of economic growth and not the big companies. The objective of the fair is to promote accelerated development of commerce and industry; revitalise and diversify the Nigerian economy by promoting the non-oil sector, agro-allied products and mineral resources; direct attention to the role of the private sector in the economy and provide access to resource and technology findings.”

  • Bringing corruption to light

    Bringing corruption to light

    In India, where petty corruption is endemic, the website ipaidabribe.com invites citizens to share their stories of bribery, believing that awareness and transparency can help to transform the system.

    “Yesterday I paid Rs 100 to a police constable for passport verification.”

    “I paid [a] bribe to collect death certificate, no freedom in corruption even in death.”

    “Harassment was only stopped when the amount was paid.”

    Tales by the victims of petty corruption fill page after page on the Indian website ipaidabribe.com. According to Transparency International, 54 percent of Indian citizens say they paid a bribe in 2010, the same year the site went live. I Paid a Bribe refers to the phenomenon as “retail corruption,” where the government machinery doesn’t work until you grease an officer’s palms.

    I Paid a Bribe was founded by a couple, Swati and Ramesh Ramanathan, who left careers in the United States to return to India and establish a non-profit organization, Janaagraha. Based out of India’s Silicon Valley, Bangalore, I Paid a Bribe is first and foremost a reporting mechanism. Its goal is to raise general awareness of the issue and improve government systems by sharing crowdsourced reports with the media and officials. Claims are made anonymously and no names are published, to avoid libel or defamation.

    “Retail corruption, in my view, corrupts the value system of the entire society,” Swati Ramanathan said. “It is very easy for everyone to go and protest in a maidan (public square) against a corrupt regime or government, and later come back home and not even blink when a cop or a government official demands a bribe.”

    I Paid a Bribe claims to have received over 4.5 million page views since its inception, and publicizes more than 27,000 stories of how people across the country have been coerced into coughing up money. Collectively, these victims report having paid about US $35 million in bribes to corrupt officers.

    The website offers information on how people can avoid paying bribes, and includes a section where people share their stories of not budging. It also encourages people to write about honest officers they come across, to encourage such behavior. “Knowing that such information is available, and that these are the steps to go through to, say, get a property registered, empowers citizens and gives them the courage to resist paying bribes,” Swati Ramanathan said.

    Ipaidabribe.com’s followers include government agencies who track the cases and sometimes even crack the whip on greedy officers. Bangalore-based engineer Manik Taneja’s post about how a customs officer browbeat him into paying a bribe resulted in the latter’s suspension. In 2012, Taneja purchased a kayak on a visit to the United States, and calculated that he would be required to pay no more than US $150 in import tax. However, the customs official at the airport demanded almost three times that amount, then threatened to impound the boat if Taneja didn’t pay him a bribe. Exhausted after a 20-hour flight, Taneja relented and paid.

    The next day, he double-checked the rules and learned that he had correctly calculated the exemption. Stung, he vented his anger on ipaidabribe.com. Soon after he received a call from the customs department, requesting him to lodge a complaint. The officer concerned was suspended.

    Joylita Saldanha, who works on the website, said the transport commissioner for the state of Karnataka (where Bangalore is located) was embarrassed to learn that his department had the city’s highest incidence of bribe-seeking. So he collaborated with the team from I Paid a Bribe to plug any loopholes. They found that driving tests, for example, were highly problematic, since determining whether or not an applicant could drive well enough for license was a subjective decision, and officers often asked for money to boost a person’s score. In response, the motor vehicle department introduced automated driving test tracks with computer monitors.The impact of I Paid a Bribe has attracted global attention. Various countries and NGOs have approached Janaagraha, asking to replicate the website’s source code. A dozen countries are now using it, including Pakistan, Greece, Hungary, and Kenya.

    “Like they say, sunlight is the best disinfectant,” Swati Ramanathan remarked. “As more and more people start sharing their experiences with corruption on a public platform, it is bound to discourage people from indulging in it, owing to the greater chance of getting caught. I think in 20 years, retail corruption can be eradicated, and certainly from our end we will do everything possible to ensure that.”

     

  • India: Mumbai Jewish centre reopens

    India: Mumbai Jewish centre reopens

    A Jewish centre in the Indian city of Mumbai has reopened, nearly six years after it was stormed by gunmen who attacked the city.

    Six Jews were killed at the centre, which was one of several places targeted in the November 2008 attacks.

    Indian forces regained control of the building after several days and killed two gunmen there.

    The attacks at a railway station, two hotels and other landmarks claimed 166 lives. Nine gunmen were also killed.

    Rabbi Gavriel Holtzberg, 29, and his pregnant wife Rivkah, 28, who ran the Chabad House Jewish cultural centre, were killed in the attack, but the couple’s two-year-old son, Moshe, survived.

    He was found crying next to their bodies by his Indian nanny, who hid in a cupboard during the attack, but emerged to rescue the child after his parents were killed.

    She later escorted the boy to Israel to care for him. He has extended family there.

    The refurbished cultural centre has a synagogue, offices, guest rooms, a restaurant, a commercial kitchen and security rooms.

    Chintan Sakariya, a local businessman, who witnessed the attack on the centre, said he had “mixed” feelings over its reopening.

    “They’re coming back strongly and we support that. But there’s going to be a lot of inconvenience for local residents, a lot of security, a lot of blockades,” he said.

    abbi Gavriel Holtzberg and his wife Rivkah who ran the centre were killed in the attack

    Rabbi Moshe Kotlarsky, a prominent member of the orthodox Chabad-Lubavitch movement who helped to rebuild the centre, said its reopening would be “really a message for the whole world”.

    In 2012, India executed Mohammad Ajmal Amir Qasab, the sole surviving gunman from the 2008 attacks.

    Qasab was part of a heavily armed and well-drilled, 10-member militant unit which arrived in Mumbai by sea on 26 November 2008.

    The men split into groups to attack various targets. Their assault on the Taj Mahal Hotel, Oberoi Trident Hotel and the Jewish centre went on for more than two days.

    Pakistan-based banned militant group Lashkar-e-Taiba was blamed for the attacks, which soured India-Pakistan ties.

  • Nigerian’s death on board flight to India sparks Ebola scare

    Nigerian’s death on board flight to India sparks Ebola scare

    Nigerian woman, 35, died while traveling from Nigeria to India for medical treatment of advanced metastatic cancer.

    The woman showed signs consistent with the Ebola virus, according to the Health Authority – Abu Dhabi (HAAD), the regulatory body of the healthcare sector in the Emirate of Abu Dhabi, who announced the death yesterday.

    During the transit phase at Abu Dhabi International Airport, the patient’s health deteriorated and despite prompt medical assistance she could not be successfully resuscitated, HAAD said in a statement.

    ‘’Full safety and precautionary measures have been taken by the medical staff who attended the patient, according to the World Health Organisation (WHO) standards for dealing with suspected cases of infectious diseases,’’ the statement added.

    The woman’s husband, the only person sitting next to her on the plane, and five medics who resuscitated her, are in isolation pending the result of Ebola testing on the patient. They are all well with no symptoms, HAAD said.

    The ministry of health would like to assure the public that there is no risk to the community, and that fellow passengers on the plane from Nigeria and in the airport were not at risk.

  • Sick Nigerian woman dies in transit to India

    Husband, medics quarantined

    A Nigerian woman transiting Abu Dhabi to India for medicals on Sunday died at the Abu Dhabi International Airport, said Health Authority-Abu Dhabi (Haad).
    The deceased who was said to suffered advance metastatic cancer, allegedly showed symptoms of the dreaded Ebola Virus Disease (EVD).
    Her health was said to have deteriorated at Abu Dhabi and despite prompt assistance by medical attendants at the airport, the 35-year-old woman could not be successfully resuscitated.
     Haad in a statement issued Sunday said it was noted at the time of resuscitation that she had shown signs that may be consistent with EVD, although her existing medical condition provided an adequate medical explanation.
    “Full safety and precautionary measures have been taken by the medical staff who attended the patient according to the World Health Organisation (WHO) standards for dealing with suspected cases of infectious diseases.
    ”In addition, all contacts of the patient (her husband who was the only person sitting next to her on the plane, and five medics who resuscitated her) are in isolation pending the result of Ebola testing on the patient. They are all well with no symptoms and there is no risk to the community. Fellow passengers on the plane from Nigeria and in the airport were not at risk,” said Haad.
  • Ebola: India quarantines Nigerian  kid, grandfather, one other

    Ebola: India quarantines Nigerian kid, grandfather, one other

    •Lagos trains 800 volunteers in fight against spread

    A four year old Nigerian kid, and two other Nigerians aged 79 and 37 on a visit to India were taken into medical isolation on arrival in New Delhi yesterday for Ebola screening and treatment if required.

    The three Nigerians were admitted at Ram Manohar Lohia Hospital.

     

    The three Nigerians quarantined in India reportedly had fever and their tests were being done at the National Centre for Disease Control (NCDC), Delhi, according to a statement.

    A 32-year-old Indian from Durg in Chhattisgarh who returned from Nigeria was similarly admitted to a hospital in Bhilai. His samples are also being tested at NCDC, the statement said.

    The World Health Organization (WHO) has said air travel, even from Ebola-affected countries, is low-risk for transmission of the disease.

    The organisation has reported a total of 2,127 cases and 1,145 deaths due to Ebola from affected countries.

    The Lagos State government confirmed yesterday its training of 800 volunteers to help fight the deadly Ebola epidemic that has already claimed four lives in the state.

    The state government last week appealed for volunteers to make up for a shortage of medical personnel because of a six-week doctors’ strike over pay.

    “People have heeded our call for service,” Hakeem Bello, Special Adviser on Media to Governor Babatunde Fashola said.

    “We have trained some 800 volunteers in the area of contact tracing, sensitisation and treatment of the Ebola disease.”

    Apart from the four lives claimed by Ebola in the city, six other people are infected by Ebola.

    Volunteers have so far been deployed to parts of the state, Bello said, adding that more are needed to contain the outbreak, particularly to treat those infected with the disease.

    Nigerian doctors have been on strike nationwide since July 1 to demand a pay rise and better working conditions.

    Nigeria became the fourth West African country to be hit by the Ebola epidemic last month after Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone.

    Athletes from Nigeria have been forced to withdraw from the Youth Olympics in China as a result of the outbreak, Chinese state media reported Saturday.

    The International Olympic Committee has barred athletes from Ebola-hit countries from competing in pool events and combat sports.

    The disease is spread by contact with an infected person’s bodily fluids such as sweat, blood and tissue and no cure or vaccine is currently available.

    Nigeria’s first fatality was Liberian government employee Patrick Sawyer, who brought the virus to Lagos on July 20. He died in hospital on July 25.

    Nigeria has not recorded a case outside Lagos but there were fears that a nurse who contracted Ebola from Sawyer at the hospital may have carried the virus to Enugu.

  • India expects faster economic growth

    India’s economy will improve this fiscal year, the government predicted on Wednesday, as a gradual increase in investment helps revive activity, although high inflation and political rumblings in other countries pose hurdles to a strong recovery.

    The South Asian economy is expected to grow closer to the lower end of a 5.4 per cent-to-5.9 per cent band forecast for the current year, according to a survey, which essentially is a review of the economy conducted by the finance ministry. It grew 4.7 per cent in the year ended March 31.

    The government said factors such as “institutional reforms to quicken implementation of large projects and a stronger-than-expected recovery in advanced economies would help the Indian economy clock a higher rate of growth.” However, inflation is expected to moderate only by the end of 2014, the government said, adding that India could also face economic pressures due to prospects of below-normal rainfall this year, which could hurt agricultural output and contribute to food-price inflation.

    The government didn’t provide inflation projections. Most recent data show consumer inflation was at 8.28 per cent in May. That is well above the six per cent level that India’s central bank would like to hit by January 2016.

    The government also gave indications of better fiscal management, promising fresh regulations aimed at providing more transparent policies with the “teeth” to strictly enforce fiscal-deficit milestones set out for the government.

    India in the past enacted a law setting fiscal-deficit targets for the government. Those targets were abandoned by the previous government as it increased social-sector spending.

    After growing as much as nine per cent in 2011, India’s economy slowed sharply to less than fivre per cent growth in the past couple of years. High inflation sapped consumer demand, while both foreign and domestic corporate investment weakened.

    Earlier this year, the Bharatiya Janata Party won national elections in a landslide. The party’s leader and India’s new prime minister, Narendra Modi, have promised to make it easier for businesses to operate and open up more sectors of the economy to foreign investment.

    The government has already drawn up plans to allow greater foreign ownership in local defense and insurance ventures. On Tuesday, it announced plans to seek foreign investment for developing the country’s railway network, following up on last month’s sharp increases in railway passenger fares and freight rates aimed at boosting revenue.

    Investors are now watching for the federal budget to be announced Thursday for fresh policy moves to encourage an ailing manufacturing sector, increase infrastructure investment and simplify tax policies.

    There is also the possibility that the new budget includes measures to reduce government subsidies. Such measures could prove to be politically unpopular, although the government report said: “Addressing the key fiscal risk of food, fertilizer and petroleum subsidies is critical for achieving better quality fiscal marksmanship.”

    “The survey presents a realistic assessment of the national economic situation,” said Sidharth Birla, president of the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry.

    “We would look for specific proposals in the budget on further subsidy rationalisation.”

     

  • Nigerians can learn more from India than others

    Rather than going to Europe or America, Chairman Banquaires-Sms University Gurgaon, Haryana, India, Felix Adeduro, has urged Nigerians seeking to study abroad to choose India.

    He said fast developing countries like India and China have more to offer Nigeria in terms of lessons than developed countries.

    Adeduro, who spoke at a press conference last week, said not only will Nigerian students learn more but they will also pay lesser than what is obtainable here in Nigeria if they study in India and China.

    “If I want my children to be successful, I would not send them to learn from a successful man.  Rather, I would send them to learn from a man who is developing gradually because they would learn the potentials of success from him,” Felix said.

    He pointed out that development is not a jigsaw puzzle but a coordinated and conscious process.

    “We need to learn from them how it is done.  Also the best destination for any country that desires economic development and growth is India,” he said.

    Adeduro added that the students can currently apply to the university to undergraduate and post graduate programmes for the 2014/2015 academic session.

    “The University is a global brand with recognition and accreditation.  It has various campuses in USA, Britain, Romania and various cities around the world. It is a multinational university with over 250 degree courses where different companies are in dire need of its products,” he said.

    The Managing Director of Banquaires-SMS Consultants, Mrs Okeke Peppy said Amity University is present in 11 countries of the world.