Tag: Kebbi

  • SMEDAN trains 90 youths on entrepreneurship in Kebbi

    The Small and Medium Enterprises Development Agency of Nigeria (SMEDAN) has trained 90 unemployed youths in Kebbi State on entrepreneurship skills, its state Manager, Alhaji Ishaq Hamis, has said.

    He said in Birnin Kebbi, the state capital that the training, the agency held with a firm, Bubbles Consulting Nigeria Limited, was aimed at educating beneficiaries on record keeping and business management.

    “We expect the trainees to become experts in marketing strategies and product expansion.

    “The training is part of the Federal Government’s efforts to explore and expose job opportunities to the youths to enable them tap from the opportunities to become self-reliant,’’ he said.

    Hamis also said SMEDAN would sustain the programme, adding that the beneficiaries would be assisted to obtain loans from the Bank of Industries and public finance organisations, to set up their own businesses.

    He advised job seekers in the state to exploit the training opportunities to become self employed.

    One of the participants, Malam Zayyanu Shehu, commended the agency for the initiative, and called for the sustenance and expansion of the training to enable more youths to benefit.

    He urged NDE to provide take-off grants for those who excelled during the training.

  • Kebbi boosts girl-child education with more schools

    Kebbi boosts girl-child education with more schools

    To boost girl-child education in Kebbi State, the government has established three new girls’ secondary schools across the state’s three senatorial districts.

    The Commissioner for Education, Ismaila Mumuni Kamba, said the government is also involving the private sector and non governmental organisaitions (NGOs) in this drive.

    Kamba spoke during the education summit/fair organised by the E2DMC, an online marketing outfit, in Lagos.

    He said: “That (girl-child education) is one area the Kebbi State government is making a very big move. Right now, we have established three new government girls’ secondary school as special girls’ secondary schools to cater for each of the three senatorial districts in the state. However, let me note that the new schools are not the only girls’ secondary schools.

    “There is also an intervention from one organisation to give assistance to girl-child education. The organisation selects a classroom out of the school and sponsors that class from that level to tertiary level.”

    On Almajiri education, Kamba told reporters that Kebbi operates five Almajiri schools that are also earmarked for tangea learning in which case, a particular institution is established to understudy almajiri education to combine it alongside western and vocational education.

    “You know there is a deliberate design for almajiri schools and right now in Kebbi, we have about five institutions that will cater for the almajiris and what they call tangea learning where a particular institution is established to observe these almajiris with their local mallams who come to teach them their lessons while they are being integrated into the modern education and other craftwork to equip them when they finish their studies,” he said.

    Kamba also said the state has established a resource centre where teachers can be trained in Information and Communication Technology (ICT). This, he said, was coming against the backdrop of the provision of computers by the government for public schools, which however lie unused due to inadequate instructors.

    “There are lots of computers in our secondary schools but when you get there, you find them lying idle because there are no instructors. In Kebbi, we have established a resource centre for teachers to come and learn ICT so as to apply the knowledge in the curriculum in their various schools,” he said.

    Describing the state of education in Kebbi as ‘fair,’ Kamba said the state is seeking more private partnership to help the government to address the myriad challenges facing edducation.

    “In Kebbi State, we are encouraging same (private partnership) because we have some individuals and organisations that are ready to come and contribute their quota at the local level. Everybody knows that education is capital-intensive so we have to manage the lean resources available to meet the basic requirement,” he said.

     

  • Vigilante arrests seven robbery suspects in Kebbi

    A MEMBER of the Vigilante Group of Nigeria in Kebbi State, Umar Bala, has single-handedly arrested seven robbery suspects at their hideout in Zauro, a suburb of Birnin Kebbi.

    Alhaji Sanusi Geza, the leader of the group, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) yesterday in Birnin Kebbi, the state capital, that the suspects were planning an operation when they were arrested a week ago.

    He said Bala overheard the suspects planning an attack and arguing over the sharing of booty from a robbery.

    The vigilante leader said the group would reward the “gallant member for his bravery”.

    Geza said: “The criminals were arrested by the singular effort of one Malam Umar Bala, who would be elevated to the rank of an Assistant Inspector.”

    According to him, the seven suspects were also involved in a robbery at Shukura Supermarket, Gwadangaji, where the security guard, Shekare Gwadangaji, was stabbed to death.

    The vigilante leader said textile materials worth over N500,000 were stolen from the supermarket.

    Geza said the suspects had been handed over to the police for further investigation and prosecution.

    NAN reports that residents of Birnin Kebbi have been subjected to a series of robbery attacks for over two months, leading to the death of some residents and loss of property.

     

  • 85 erosion, flood projects to be inaugurated in December — Minister

    The Minister of Environment, Mrs Hadiza Malafia, has said that no fewer than 83 flood and erosion projects will be ready for inauguration by December.

    Mailafia said this, while making a presentation to the PDP National Working Committee on the Transformation Agenda of President Goodluck Jonathan in the environment sector.

    She said that the ministry had planned to execute more than 147 projects, but lacked the funds to implement them.

    The minister said that 39 capital projects were executed in 2011, while 64 capital projects were executed nationwide between January and June this year.

    She said that 15 projects located in South-East geo-political zone were at between 45 and 100 per cent completion.

    Mailafia said, ”Three of those projects located at Nekede, Ojoto and St. Kizito are also ready for commissioning. “We have installed 15 Community-based Flood Early Warning System (FEWS) and 4 automated FEWS nationwide.

    ”We increased the installation Web-based FEWS from 307 to 402 across the country to inform Nigerians on flood reports.”

    On desertification control and forest management, Mailafia said that the ministry had, in June, inaugurated the Great Green Wall (GGW) programme in Kebbi to combat desertification.

    She said that the programme would be implemented simultaneously in 11 front line states of Adamawa, Bauchi, Gombe, Kebbi, Sokoto, Zamfara, Katsina, Kano, Jigawa, Yobe and Borno.

    The minister said that the programme would cover 43 local government areas in the 11 frontline states, adding that 225,000 hectares of lands would be rehabilitated.

    She said, ”Resources have been approved for the implementation and participating states, local councils and communities have been identified.

    ”We have started planting in Bachaka, Arewa Local government Area of Kebbi and Mr President will flag-off the programme later this year.”

    Mailafia, however, expressed regrets about the attitude of some Nigerians on issues of sanitation, describing the situation as worrisome.

    She said the Federal Government had formulated good environmental policies to transform the environment, but that Nigerians had no respect for those rules and regulations.

    According to her, the ministry has established some integrated waste management facilities to ensure cleanliness.

    Mailafia further said that the ministry had identified and implemented various programmes to build Nigerians’ resilience to the impacts of Climate Change.

    In his remarks, the National Chairman of PDP, Alhaji Bamanga Tukur, commended Mailafia for transforming the environment sector.

    Tukur said the manifesto of the party included good environmental programmes aimed at sustaining the environment; secure healthy living and addressing environmental challenges.

    He urged the minister to ensure effective implementation of environmental policies and regulations.

    ”We encourage you to make effective use of the environmental health officers by going to inspect rural communities, all these will make people to imbibe good sanitation and hygiene practices,” he said.

     

     

     

     

  • Kebbi:  Army seizes petrol tanker loaded with arms

    Kebbi: Army seizes petrol tanker loaded with arms

    Soldiers in Kebbi State have impounded a petrol tanker loaded with arms and ammunitions.

    The arrest was effected on Thursday during a joint patrol by the army and the State Security Service (SSS),the Commanding Officer, 1 Battalion Lt. Col. Sunday Ilori, said yesterday in Birnin-Kebbi.

    Found in the fuel compartment of the oil tanker were three AK 47 Rifles, one RPG-2, nine AK 47 magazines, two bombs, three RPG chargers and 790 rounds of 7.62mm of special ammunitions

    “The arrest and confiscation of arms was sequel to the on-going operations of the 1 Battalion of the Nigerian Army with headquarters in Sokoto, against insurgency and insurgent activities within its area of responsibilities.

    “The efforts resulted in the arrest of one suspect, arms and ammunition and a petrol tanker on July 11, 2013 after a combined operation between the 1 Battalion of the Nigerian Army and the State Security Services.”

    Two suspects escaped when the vehicle was intercepted

    He said investigation is on to “unravel the source and ownership of the arms and ammunition.”

    The suspect claimed that he was paid N500, 000 to deliver the items to Sokoto and that the owners had threatened to eliminate his family.

     

  • Dangote to invest $60m in  sugar in Kwara, Kebbi states

    Dangote to invest $60m in sugar in Kwara, Kebbi states

    President, Dangote Group of Companies, Alhaji Muhammed Aliko Dangote,, has promised to invest over $600 million in the production of sugar in Kwara, Kebbi and Sokoto states.

    He also expressed satisfaction with the state government efforts at revolutionalising agricultural practice in the state.

    Dangote stated during a courtesy call on the Kwara State Governor, Dr Abdulfatah Ahmed at the Government House, Ilorin.

    In a statement, the Chief Press Secretary to Governor, Alhaji Abdulwahab Oba, said Dangote intend to replicate what it did in the cement industry, by targeting about 65million tonnes of sugar which he said could produce about one million jobs for the people.

    He said in the next five years, the company would produce and grow two million tonnes of sugar, as part of efforts to ensure that Nigeria becomes self-sufficient in consumables instead of depending on importation.

    He said Nigeria was wasting quite a lot of money in the importation of about two million tons of sugar, adding that the company has identified Patigi local government area for the sugarcane plantation. He expressed the hope that with the cooperation of the people and the state government, the project would take-off before the end of the year.

    Governor Ahmed said his administration was very committed to working with investors in its bid to transform the economic lives of the people.

    Ahmed assured Dangote that his administration would create the enabling environment for would-be investors to operate, coupled with adequate security for the growth of the economy.

    The Governor said Nigeria would never get it wrong if it invested in agriculture as the northern part of the country was endowed with arable soil which could be utilized for agriculture as a foreign exchange earner for the nation.

  • Polio: Fighting  a tough battle

    Polio: Fighting a tough battle

    As preparations begin for the next sub-national Immunisation Plus’ Days (IPDs) using bivalent oral polio vaccine, Oyeyemi Gbenga-Mustapha takes a look at why the vaccine preventable polio is still endemic in Nigeria.

    Nigeria is one of the three countries that is still polio-endemic, it is in this unenviable company with Afghanistan and Pakistan. Of all the three, Nigeria is the reservoir of wild polio virus, it is the only country with ongoing transmission of all three serotypes- wild poliovirus type 1, wild poliovirus type 3 and circulating vaccine- desired polio type 2. The Northern states are the main source of polio infections.

    In 2009, operational improvements in these northern states led to a 90 per cent decline in cases of wild poliovirus type 1 and a 50 per cent decline in overall cases compared with 2008.

    As of last week, Polio Global Eradication Initiative, a monitoring organisation of polio situation in Nigeria, reported that two new cases of wild polio virus 1 have been found in Kano and Taraba states, bringing the total number of wild polio cases for this year to 18. The case from Kano is the most recent case in the country.

    According to medical experts, as long as a single child remains infected, children in all countries are at risk of contracting polio. Failure to eradicate polio from these last remaining strongholds could result in as many as 200, 000 new cases every year within 10 years. Polio has no cure but can be prevented.

    In most countries, the global effort has expanded capacities to tackle other infectious diseases by building effective surveillance and immunization systems.

    A delicate balance

    Polio is a highly infectious disease caused by a virus. It invades the nervous system, and can cause total paralysis in a matter of hours. Initial symptoms are fever, fatigue, headache, vomiting, stiffness in the neck and pain in the limbs. According to the World Health Organisation (WHO), one in 200 infections lead to irreversible paralysis (usually in the legs). Among those paralysed, five per cent to 10 per cent die when their breathing muscles become immobilised.

    According to WHO, globally, Polio cases have decreased by over 99 per cent since 1988, from an estimated 350, 000 cases to 223 reported cases in 2012. The reduction is the result of the global effort to eradicate the disease.

    Nigeria is fighting to end the endemic. However, there are sundry factors militating against the actualisation of this hope.

    The polio eradication programme continue to miss too many children in key geographic areas and population groups due to a mixture of operational and social factors. In 2012, going by data supplied by Polio Global Eradication Initiative, 61 children were paralyzed by polio in the first half of 2012, as opposed to 24 at the same time in 2011. In 2011, more than 95 per cent of all cases occurred in the eight persistently endemic northern states of Borno, Jigawa, Kano, Katsina, Kebbi, Sokoto, Yobe and Zamfara.

    A formerly strong primary health care system in northern Nigeria has been weakened over many years due to incessant polio outbreaks and resistant of a segment of the populace over the safety of the vaccination. This has led to serious gap in the administration of the vaccine and subsequent disruption of campaigns as well as the killing of vaccinators. Now routine immunisation services are either no longer available or irregular; coupled with limited resources for health services and gaps in vaccine storage and distribution.

    According to a nongovernmental organisation, PATH, Northern Nigeria has one of the lowest rates of immunisation coverage in the world. In many parts of the north, barely 10 percent of children receive all of their routine vaccines. Coverage rates for the vaccine against tetanus among women are equally low.

    Misunderstood scheme

    The north is rife with misperception on the effects of the contents of the vaccine on health, especially reproduction. Campaigns have been on in the north that vaccination leads to reduction of productivity, this has been countered at all levels but the impact is still there.

    But in the face of sundry factors including insecurity, especially of Boko Haram, ridding the country of the polio virus can remain a mirage. Conflicts and insecurity do weaken public health systems.

    For instance, attacks on health workers in Kano State have robbed vulnerable populations of basic life-saving health interventions. In the face of these, Nigeria continues to pose a significant risk to surrounding countries. In 2011, polio viruses originating from Nigeria were detected in five countries on West and Central Africa. Despite dozens of vaccination campaigns over the past years, according to Polio Global Eradication Initiative, no more than 65 percent of children have received four or more Oral Polio Vaccine (OPV) doses in Borno, Kano, Sokoto and Yobe states.

    Viruses with genetic evidence of long periods of circulation without detection are still being found, indicating surveillance gaps. Sub national engagement of political leadership remains patchy. Future benefits of polio eradication are immense. Once polio is eradicated, the world can celebrate the delivery of a major global public good that will benefit all, no matter where they live. According to WHO, Economic modelling has found that the eradication of polio would save at least US$ 40 to 50 billion over the next 20 years, mostly in low-income countries. Most importantly, success will mean that no child will ever again suffer the terrible effects of lifelong polio-paralysis.

     

     

  • Kebbi to assist SMEs get loans

    The Kebbi State Government said it would support members of the state chapter of National Association of Small Scale Industries (NASSI) to obtain loans from the national body.

    The Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Commerce and Industries, Alhaji Abdullahi Gebe, said this was part of government’s efforts to improve industrial development in the state.

    Gebe, who addressed officials of the association in Birnin Kebbi, advised them to register their proposals for the NASSI’s loans.

    NASSI Secretary in the state, Alhaji Sama’ila Sulaiman, said the state chapter would form a committee that would work with the government to obtain the loans.

    He said: “The association will ensure that members benefit from the Bank of Industry’s loans given the facts the funds have been set aside as loans to small scale industrialists with 4.5 per cent interest rate.”

    He said the association would embark on a tour in the state to ensure members registered and benefitted from the loans.

    “It is lamentable that small scale industrialists have remained dormant in spite of the opportunities that abound and we will ensure that the trend is reversed,” he added.

     

  • Kebbi to recruit 8,000 teachers

    Jobless teachers in Kebbi State may soon smile as the government is set to employ 8,000 teachers from the zonal education centres as part of efforts to reduce the impact of the dearth of teachers.

    The Commissioner of Science and Technical Education, Alhaji Ruwa Dakingari, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Birnin Kebbi that the employment would be spread evenly among the state zonal education centres.

    He said the minimum qualification required of the teachers were Bachelors Degree, Higher National Diploma (HND), National Certificate in Education (NCE) or Diploma in Arabic and Islamic knowledge.

    Dakingari said recruitment at the Argungu and Bunza zonal education centres had started and it would be conducted in the Jega, Yauri and Zuru zonal education centres.

    He added that the exercise would be concluded this month.

    He said the dearth of teachers was felt more at the primary school level than at the secondary schools and higher institutions. He expressed the hope that the trend would be reversed.

    “Having completed the construction of some new schools, the ministry has embarked on the decongestion of schools to provide an environment that is conducive for teaching and learning.

    “The renovation of the schools and infrastructure as well as the construction of new science laboratories for the schools will also start soon.’’

  • Kebbi promotes 4,560 teachers

    The Kebbi Universal Basic Education Board has promoted 4,560 primary school teachers.

    The Secretary of the board, Alhaji Sodangi Bello, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Birnin Kebbi that the promotions were meant for deserving teachers to boost their performance.

    He said the promotion was delayed because the board was waiting for the final report of the recent verification of school teachers.

    Bello said majority of the teachers had started enjoying the payment following their promotions.

    He said the board would enhance teachers’ welfare to make the teaching more attractive.

    Bello said the board had, in the last two years, sponsored 1,200 teachers for further training to enable them to acquire the National Certificate of Education (NCE) and degree in higher institutions.

    He said the board and stakeholders in education, also organised capacity building training aimed at enhancing performance and productivity of teachers and students. He warned teachers against absenteeism, lateness, truancy and unlawful practices.

    He said: “We (Board) will not spare erring teachers as effective methods of supervision and inspection have been put in place to check such offences.”

    He commended the state and local governments for prompt release of counterpart funding for salaries and other entitlements of teachers.