Tag: KOGI

  • Kogi NMA rejects 50% salary payment

    Kogi NMA rejects 50% salary payment

    The Nigerian Medical Association ( NMA ) in Kogi on Thursday rejected the payment of 50 per cent salary to her members by the State Government.
    Th state Chairman of NMA, Dr Godwin Tijani, in a statement in Lokoja, expressed displeasure with the payment of half salary to her members and therefore outrightly rejected it.
    According to him, NMA was not invited to the meeting held between the State Government and labour leaders where it was purportedly agreed that 50 per cent would be paid to workers.
    “We only saw the news in the media this morning but we initially denied it as untrue, but now many of our members have gotten alert confirming the payment of half of their salaries.
    “Kogi doctors are not happy with that decision, and as a noble and an understanding association, we expected the government to notify us of this shortfalls and not be taken by surprise.
    “We learnt that those working in tertiary institutions are being paid full salary while those with the Ministry and Hospital Management Board (HMB) are getting half salary.
    “NMA express displeasure with that level of discrimination,” Tijani said.
    He, however, appealed to all members to remain calm and not be discouraged by such discrimination, urging them to go about their normal activities.
    “We are working hard to ensure this abnormal cut in their salaries are corrected,” said the chairman.

  • Dangerous meat, toxic waters 3: Nigerians  die from  ‘food poisoning’

    Dangerous meat, toxic waters 3: Nigerians die from ‘food poisoning’

    IN Kogi, the shrill taunt of death afflicts the natives like a bad dream. The wild cries of deaths at home and the fields, haunt indigent folk of Okunran, Okoloke and Isanlu-Esa in Yagba West local council. It torments them in their sleep and as they go about their daily chores.

    It started as a ‘strange disease.’ Six weeks after it berthed in Okoloke village, a settlement predominantly inhabited by Fulani herdsmen, gastroenteritis, a diarrheic ailment caused by zoonotic bacteria, has been identified as the cause of 62 deaths in Yagba West.

    The State Commissioner for Health, Saka Audu,   revealed that those so far diagnosed were found to be suffering from gastroenteritis and malaria.

    “The disease actually started six weeks ago in Okoloke village in Yagba West, which is a settlement that is predominantly inhabited by Fulani herdsmen. There have been cases of reported deaths following abdominal pain, vomiting, and diarrhoea, but the patients who showed signs of illness had since been evacuated and transported to Kogi State Specialist Hospital Lokoja, for better treatment,” said Audu.

    Gastroenteritis, according to health experts, is an inflammation of the stomach and intestines that manifests in the form of vomiting or diarrhoea. Bleeding may occur in stools and in severe cases, the victim dies. Acute gastroenteritis manifests as diarrhoea and vomiting, and fever occasionally. The disease is a major global health problem, causing about two million deaths annually among children under five years of age. The greatest burden of the disease, however, impacts in developing countries, often devastatingly, due to poor sanitation, lack of safe drinking water, and unsanitary food processing culture, argued Kola Atunbi, a medical doctor.

    Atunbi stated that the most common cause of gastroenteritis is a viral infection. “It is often caused by food poisoning or contaminated water supply,” he said.

    The disease’s outbreak in Okoloke, an area predominantly inhabited by herdsmen, substantiates fears across medical circuits that its transmission route in Kogi can be traced from cattle to man. The most common cause of  the viral infection however, has been identified as food ingested by its human victims.

    “Food infected with Salmonella, Brucella and Escherichia Coli (E. coli) can cause gastroenteritis. Meat and other poultry products, dairy milk, shellfish and parboiled rice are also common vectors of the disease. It is most likely that the disease spread faster across the affected areas as a food borne virus,” said Isabella Momodu, a public health consultant.

    Momodu’s summation may not be too far from the truth. Previous outbreaks of gastroenteritis and other zoonoses have been traced beyond slaughterhouses, to neighbourhood food canteens, stalls of itinerant food hawkers and presumably standard, decent eateries and restaurants.

    The fact that the current outbreak in Kogi has been traced to local cattle herds, further substantiates established medical and scientific discoveries of food-borne hazards along Nigeria’s meat value chain.

    The World Health Organisation (WHO) reports that illness due to contaminated food is the most widespread health problem in the world and an important cause of reduced socio-economic productivity.

    In Nigeria, there is no organised system for monitoring outbreaks of food-borne infections in humans, which explains the inability to ascertain the true nature of the crisis in Kogi, soon after the first casualty.

    For six weeks, the government dithered for lack of essential and policy provisions guiding responses to an outbreak of such fatal consequences. Thus the coinage of ‘strange disease’ in describing the diarrheic outbreak that claimed 62 lives in three local governments in the state.

    Reason for Kogi’s death toll

    Most food-borne diseases in Nigeria appear to occur predominantly as isolated sporadic cases rather than taking the form of outbreaks and many, if not most, cases of food-borne infections are unrecognised, uninvestigated and undocumented, lamented Bodunde Hakeem, a medical lab scientist.

    Corroborating him, Thelma Soaga, a public health officer, stated: “Many patients do not seek help from hospitals but rather engage in self-medication or use of medicinal herbs. It is, therefore, difficult to determine the actual incidence of food-borne infections. However, diarrhoea is a good indicator of food-borne disease and better data exist for the prevalence and impact of diarrhoea in Nigeria.”

    In developing countries, typically 50 to 60 percent of diarrhoea cases are bacterial in origin. In Nigeria, the proportion may be higher at 65 to 80 per cent, according to health experts.

    “Most of the bacterial causes of diarrhoea are zoonotic, that is, transmissible between animals and humans, and the most notable bacterial zoonoses are toxigenic E. coli infection, campylobacteriosis, brucellosis, cryptosporidiosis, Staphylococcus aureus (S.aureus) infection, salmonellosis, listeriosis, toxoplasmosis, and Bacillus cereus infection.

    “Important non-zoonotic bacterial causes of diarrhoea include typhoid and cholera. Others such as B. cereus may be environmental contaminants as well as zoonoses. This complexity makes it difficult to estimate the relative importance of infected animals, polluted environments and infected people as sources of infection.

    “Even if food-borne zoonotic pathogens are detected in humans, they are often not traced back to the likely animal source due to inadequate medical diagnostic facilities in most hospitals across the country,” explained Funmilayo Osuntuyi, a medical doctor.

    A large number of studies examining food-borne hazards have established that besides Brucella,  E. coli and Salmonella are two popular meat-borne hazards in the country. The E. coli strains are important food-borne pathogens responsible for gastroenteritis with manifestations of abdominal pains, bloody diarrhoea and kidney failure, especially in children. Cattle are important reservoirs of E.coli virus and contaminated meat is a major vehicle for its transmission from animals to humans.

    Local fast-food restaurants commonly referred to as “bukas” are regarded as likely sources of infection. In Akwa Ibom, bloody, diarrheic E. coli accounted for 31 per cent of all cases of diarrhoea in humans, according to recent scientific findings.

    A significantly higher prevalence of the virus was observed in Lagos (35.0%) with greater rate of meat consumption and more eateries than in Zaria (23.7%) which had a lower rate of meat consumption and fewer eateries.

    In southeastern Nigeria, seven E. coli strains were isolated from 520 diarrhoeic stool samples from patients with acute diarrhoea in Enugu and Anambra States recently.

     

    Food-borne viruses

    Contamination can occur at multiple steps along the food chain. A previous outbreak of Salmonella food-poisoning in Ibadan, Oyo State, resulted in the death of 20 people. The outbreak was attributed to the consumption of improperly preserved sandwiches contaminated with the Salmonella virus (typhimurium phage type U282).

    And just recently, 10 duplicate (20) samples of fresh meat (beef) were randomly sampled from two major markets, the  Watt and Marian markets in Calabar, Cross River State by researchers Iheanyi Okonkwo, Udeze Augustine, Ani Nkang and peer across six universities including University of Port Harcourt, University of Ibadan, University of Ilorin and Federal University of Technology, Owerri, Imo State.

    The meat samples were analysed microbiologically to establish rates of contamination by bacteria. Fresh meat samples from both locations, Watt and Marian markets, showed marked growth of bacteria and a total of 36 isolates comprising eight different classes of bacteria were isolated with an average incidence rate of 50% in each market.

    The viruses include Klebsiella pneumoniae, E. coli, and Salmonella, and their presence in the fresh meat samples is alarming.

    A series of unfortunate findings

    Besides, Salmonella, E. coli and Brucella, Giardia, a diarrheic virus, has manifested in parts of the country. In a six- month scientific study of Giardia parasites among patients that attended the University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital (UMTH), Maiduguri, Borno State, of the 256 patients examined, 85 (33.2%) haboured Giardia species. Of the 156 diarrhoeic patients examined, 64 (41.0%) tested positive to the disease, while 100 non-diarrhoeic patients, 21 (21.0%) were also infected. The even spread of infection among patients has been described as endemic in Maiduguri.

    Giardiasis is usually associated with contaminated water supplies, poor personal hygiene, ignorance and poverty. The diarrheic virus is also transferrable by vectors such as housefly and it is responsible for over three million deaths annually, mostly in children. However, despite the danger constituted by the disease, there is still dearth of information and proactive campaign against Giardiasis and other zoonoses in Maiduguri.

    Leptospirosis, a zoonotic disease also manifests in the country with debilitating and life threatening consequences on its human hosts. The disease’s prevalence rate in Abuja, Benue, Plateau and Nassarawa States excites worry as recent screening of 263 blood samples from male and female abattoir workers in the four states showed 87.7% (male) and 81.0% (female) prevalence rates respectively.

    Nassarawa State had the highest prevalence rate of 94.3%, while the least rate was found in Plateau State with 82.8%. Like Brucella and Salmonella, symptoms of Leptospira infection closely mimic those of many febrile illnesses and accurate diagnosis may be missed due to its similarities to other fever.

    Human leptospirosis manifests as a wide spectrum of clinical illnesses, ranging from mild infections to severe multi-organ failure associated with high mortality and morbidity in different countries. It is transmitted to humans via direct or indirect contact with water, food or soil containing blood, urine and tissue from an infected animal.

    It infects the body through mucous membranes of the eyes, nose and mouth, or abraded skin by bathing or accidental immersion in fresh water lakes, rivers or canals contaminated with the urine of the infected livestock. Livestock often contract the disease from rats.

    The disease has also been reported in Enugu, Oyo and Bauchi among cattle, abattoir workers and volunteer blood donors. Despite its significance as a public health threat, leptospirosis is rarely diagnosed in most health care facilities in the country.

     

    Antibiotic-resistant viruses

    Listeria and E. coli isolates from muscle tissues of slaughtered cattle at a Bodija municipal abattoir in Ibadan, Oyo State revealed that meat is prone to contamination by antibiotic-resistant strains of the viruses, during slaughter and processing, due to unhygienic practices by abattoir workers.

    A research team including Victoria Adetunji and Tajudeen Isola of the Department of Veterinary Public Health and Preventive Medicine, University of Ibadan (U.I)  “found that the muscle tissues from the slaughtered cattle were highly contaminated, with the total aerobic, coliform and  Listeria counts being higher than the acceptable international standards. Isolated E. coli and Listeria demonstrated 100 per cent resistance to all tested antibiotics,” according to the team.

    Apparently, majority of the viruses responsible for diarrhoea in Nigeria are zoonotic and cattle are important reservoirs for many. In recent hospital studies, 33 out of 116 patients examined, had a history of meat consumption shortly before the onset of symptoms.

    Worried by high incidences of zoonotic infections in humans, the Federal Department of Livestock, four Nigerian universities teaching veterinary medicine, the Directorate of Research of the National Veterinary Research Institute, the Nigerian Institute for Trypanosomiasis (and Onchocerciasis) Research and Chief Veterinary Officers from selected states, and representatives of the private sector, met with International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI) scientists at the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture, Ibadan, Oyo State, to deliberate and address the country’s zoonoses burden.

    The forum identified food as a gendered commodity, with men and women typically playing different roles in livestock production and processing, with implications for food safety.

    The health experts warned that the general public is at high risk of contracting food-borne viruses through the consumption of contaminated food and abattoir workers are at greater risk of exposure.

    However, because the number of consumers of meat is greater than the number of people working closely with animals and their products, the greatest burden of infection is borne by consumers.

    There is no gainsaying that beef is the most commonly consumed meat in Nigeria thus increasing its potential contribution to the food-borne diarrhoea burden. The cost of illnesses associated with food-borne and beef-borne diarrhoea in the country was estimated by the Nigerian and ILRI scientific think-thank as follows: 173 million episodes of diarrhoea in the country is attributable to food and 35 million episodes of diarrheic ailments are attributable to beef.

    The cost of diarrhoea are US$ 3.6 billion (about N1.3 trillion) and the cost of food-borne diarrhoea are US$ 2.0 billion (about N724 billion). The cost of beef-borne diarrhoea from treatment and lost income is US$156 million (about N57 billion), according to the forum.

    Public health officers identify a higher prevalence of zoonoses in food sellers and handlers due to the crucial role they play in the preparation and sale of food in public and the nation’s abattoirs.

    Biological contaminants, largely bacteria and other parasites, constitute the major causes of food-borne diseases often transmitted through food, water, nails, and fingers of food sellers and handlers contaminated with faeces. A recent study in Abuja, Federal Capital Territory (FCT), established the prevalence of bacteria and intestinal parasites among food handlers in the FCT. Stool, urine and fingernail analysis of 168 food handlers revealed worrisome truths about their food processing culture.

    Staphylococcus and E. coli viruses were found in their fingernails. The subjects’ stool samples also tested positive to Salmonella (42.3%) and Shigella (15.5%) viruses. A high prevalence of intestinal parasites (38.1%) and bacteria (62.6%) was also discovered in the stools of the food-handlers.

     

    Is livestock business and policy review the answer?

    The use of retention ponds for pre-treatment of abattoir effluents has been suggested as an effective physical treatment method in reducing contamination levels of communal waters. Health experts also advised that entrepreneurs dealing in animal wastes such as bones, manure and blood should be encouraged through government policies to convert abattoir wastes to useful products.

    Abattoir operators should be trained on hygiene methods and enlightened by the government and NGOs, on impacts of abattoir effluents on public health and the environment.

    Public health practitioners also suggested that the country’s  policy on livestock business and ownership should be reviewed to meet the challenges of present realities.

    “Government should ban public hawking of livestock and the use of residential houses as poultry farms. These portend great health hazard to human population and could snow-ball to a deadly epidemic. It will be difficult to contain any such pandemic given the poor state of the nation’s health sector and lethargic emergency response facilities,” warned Bidemi Kalejaiye, a veterinary doctor.

    Kalejaiye advised that the government and regulatory authorities should ensure that the policy regulating abattoir operations and poultry farms are strictly adhered to. The government must institute policy that outlaws the location of new abattoirs, meat markets and poultry in residential areas,” she said.

    Ruth Onoshe, a food seller and resident of New Oko Oba, Agege, Lagos, however, argued that, besides the occasional stench of slurry and other animal waste that emanates from the abattoir, “No one could possibly die or fall sick by living close to an abattoir.”

    She described complaints about food-borne viruses and food poisoning as exaggerated claims and false alarms. The mother of four said that she has been selling food in the Oko-Oba abattoir for four years and none of her customers had ever complained of stomach ache or food poisoning.

    “See how enticing the aroma is. See how it sizzles in the pot. Taste it. It is very delicious. My food is always delicious,” said the food seller, who also believes that adding ‘curry and ginger’ to beef meal rids it of every infection.

  • Kogi to partner NDLEA on drug abuse

    Kogi to partner NDLEA on drug abuse

    Lokoja, Aug. 24, (2017) Mrs Bolanle Amupitan, Commissioner for Women Affairs and Social Development in Kogi, on Thursday said the state government would collaborate with the National Drug Law Enforcement agency (NDLEA) to control drug abuse in the state.

    Amupitan, who disclosed this while receiving NDLEA officials in Lokoja, said the state government would participation in this year’s commemoration of the international drug abuse day in the state.

    She also said that the state government would support drug addicts to overcome their challenges.

    She described poverty, marital problems and lack of parental care as some of the causes of drug abuse and called for support to rehabilitate the addicts.

    She assured the agency of the government supports, adding that there was an initiative of the Northern Governor’s Wives Forum (NGWF) to tackle the menace of drug abuse among the youths.

    The commissioner said the governor’s wife, Mrs Rashida Bello, would participate in this year’s celebration to encourage parents to guide their children against drug abuse.

    Earlier, the Commander of NDLEA in the state, Idris Bello, said the agency was ready to partner the state government to control the menace of drug abuse in the state.

     

  • APC inaugurates seven-member reconciliation committee for Kogi

    APC inaugurates seven-member reconciliation committee for Kogi

    Chief John Odigie-Oyegun, National Chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC), on Monday in Abuja, inaugurated a seven-member reconciliation committee for the party’s Kogi chapter.

    According to a statement issued by Malam Bolaji Abudullahi, the APC National Publicity Secretary, the committee is chaired by Gen. Idris Garba, while the party’s Deputy National Secretary, Mr Victor Giadom would be its Secretary.

    Other members of the committee are: Chief Don Etiebet; Rt. Hon. Patricia Etteh; Group. Capt. Rufai Garba; Alhaji Umar Lawan Kareto and Group. Capt. Joe Orji.

    Odigie-Oyegun thanked members of the committee for agreeing to serve the party in the committee, adding that the party’s leadership wanted peace and settlement in its Kogi chapter.

    He added that the situation in Kogi was unique, saying that what triggered the event in the state was tragic in their nature.

    He further added that the party leadership was bending backwards because it understood the feelings of the people and what they had been through.

    “We understand the work that you have put in to get the APC elected; we understand also that God who disposes of power, brought somebody at the last minute to be the beneficiary of all the work and labour that everybody obviously had put in.

    “Fortunately, we had a fact-finding committee that has done a lot of the basic work and submitted a report which will be made available to the reconciliation committee.

    “We know the principal parties in the various groups in Kogi; we know what their grievances are.

    “So the issue now is really to call just the principal groups and say look, this has to stop, how do we go about it.

    “The governor of course will be there to say his piece and give you all the assistance necessary to make your task successful.

    “We want peace in Kogi state. Events there have been very very unusual. But like I said, given the emotive nature of the event that led to it, we have decided to stretch the opportunities for reaching peace,” he said.

    The chairman of the committee thanked the party for the opportunity to serve and assured the party that the committee wold bring peace and settlement to the party in Kogi

    “There is no doubt that it is an onerous task, but we are committed people and believe in bringing our experiences to bear on the issue, we will be able to resolve the issue as directed by our great party,” he said.

  • ‘Unknown disease’ in Kogi diagnosed as gastroenteritis

    Kogi State Health Commissioner Dr. Saka Audu said yesterday the alleged unknown disease had been diagnosed as gastroenteritis.

    He called for calm.

    The commissioner told News Agency of Nigeria in Lokoja those so far diagnosed were found to be suffering from gastroenteritis and malaria.

    The Ministry of Health, had in a statement, said the disease killed many people in Okunran, Okoloke and Isanlu-Esa in Yagba West Local Government.

    “Information available to us is that the disease started six weeks ago in Okoloke village in Yagba West, a settlement inhabited by Fulani herdsmen.

    “There have been cases of reported deaths following abdominal pain, vomiting and diarrhoea, but the patients who showed signs of illness had been evacuated to Kogi State Specialist Hospital Lokoja, for better treatment.

    “So far, we have evacuated 39 patients from Okoloke and only six of them were admitted and have shown sign of improvement, while others have since been discharged.

    “Of the six that were admitted, three of them were diagnosed with gastroenteritis, the remaining three were just cases of malaria, and they have shown signs of improvement,” Audu said.

  • Buhari : Kogi declares public holiday for thanksgiving

    Buhari : Kogi declares public holiday for thanksgiving

    Kogi State government has declared Aug. 21 as a public holiday for citizens to thank God for safely returning President Muhammadu Buhari to the country.

    The Director -General, media and publicity to the state governor, Mr Kingsley Fanwo,  said it was to enable the people to give thanks to God for returning  Buhari in sound health and sound mind.

    He said that decision was also in line with the support the people of the state had been giving to Buhari in his efforts at correcting the ills of the past and putting the nation on sound economic footing.

    “ We urge Kogites to also use the occasion of the public holiday to pray for Mr. President as he resumes his responsibilities of repositioning Nigeria, “ the statement said.

    The statement quoted the state governor, Alhaji Yahaya Bello as thanking the people for for standing by the President while undergoing treatment in London and for trooping to Abuja to welcome the him. (NAN)

  • Killer disease in Kogi diagnosed as gastroenteritis

    Killer disease in Kogi diagnosed as gastroenteritis

    The Kogi State Commissioner for Health, Dr Saka Audu, on Sunday said that the alleged unknown disease has been diagnosed to be gastroenteritis and therefore called for calmness.

    The commissioner told the News Agency of Nigeria in Lokoja that those so far diagnosed were found to be suffering from gastroenteritis and malaria.

    The state Ministry of Health, had in a statement, said that the disease killed many people in Okunran, Okoloke and Isanlu-Esa in Yagba West Local Government Area.

    “The current information available to us is that the disease actually started six weeks ago in Okoloke village in Yagba West, which is a settlement that is predominantly inhabited by Fulani herdsmen.

    “There have been cases of reported deaths following abdominal pain, vomiting and diarrhoea, but the patients who showed signs of illness had since been evacuated and transported to Kogi State Specialist Hospital Lokoja, for better treatment.

    “So far, we have evacuated 39 patients from Okoloke area and only six of them were admitted and have shown significant sign of improvement while others have since been discharged.

    “Out of the six that were admitted, three of them were diagnosed of gastroenteritis and the remaining three were just cases of malaria, and they have shown remarkable signs of improvement,” Audu said.

    He also stressed that the disease was not Lassa fever, saying the result of samples taken from the patients to Irua General Hospital for investigation proved negative.

    On the 62 persons earlier reported to have died, the commissioner said the figure was given by local leaders in the affected areas and was yet to be verified by government.

    “ We will investigate and trace the dead people to the grave yard and come up with the correct figure.

    “We want to assure the general public that government is doing all that is humanly possible to stay on top of the situation and forestall further loss of lives.

    “We will continue to inform the public as the investigation progresses,’’ Audu said.(NAN)

  • Strange ailment: Kogi denies 62 dead

    • 42 evacuated, says CMD

    Kogi State Commissioner for Health, Dr Saka Audu, has dispelled reports that 62 people have so far died from a strange ailment in Yagba West local government area.

    The commissioner explained the epidemic started about six weeks back at Okunran, Okoloke and Isanlu-Esa, all in Yagba West local government.

    He, however, ruled out outbreak of Lassa fever, saying laboratory tests carried out on some of the patients by medical experts drafted to the community proved not to be the case.

    The Chief Medical Doctor (CMD), Kogi State Specialist Hospital Lokoja, Dr Bolorunduro Ehalaiye, said that 42 patients were brought to the hospital last Thursday out of which six were diagnosed.

    The medical director who made the disclosure yesterday, said out of the 42 evacuated from the villages, six were admitted as a result of vomiting and stooling, adding that they were responding to treatment.

    One of the patients at the Specialist Hospital, Abubakar Guruku, said that “a lot of people died.”

    He could, however, not give an accurate number of the casualties.

    Audu, in a statement last Friday, said 62 persons allegedly killed by the disease, came from initial information by the Fulani leaders in the villages, stressing that the figure was yet to be ascertained.

    According to him: “Honestly, we have decided to carry out the ideal findings, so that we can come up with the actual figures.

    “We will investigate and trace the dead people to the grave yard and come up with the correct figure.

    “We want to assure the general public that government is doing all that is humanly possible to stay on top of the situation and forestall further loss of lives.

    “We will continue to inform the public as the investigation progresses”.

    Kogi State Epidemiologist, Dr Francis Akpa, said claims by Fulani leaders in the villages on the death toll cannot be taken to be correct until medical personnel carry out “empirical assessment to have a conclusive prove and figure of the number of deaths.”

  • Kogi farmers, govt bicker over N2m Anchor Borrowers’ scheme

    There appears to be a sharp disagreement between some farmers in Kogi and the state government in the implementation of the Central Bank of Nigeria’s (CBN’s) Anchor Borrowers’ programme. There are allegations that beneficiaries are being shortchanged.

    Some of the farmers under the scheme are crying foul over the programme implementation, alleging that they were denied the N2 million grant component of the scheme about a year after farming equipment were released by the state government.

    They claimed that soon after the takeoff of the Anchor Borrowers’ programme, the government announced a slash in the grant to N200,000 and later to N75,000, adding that they were however yet to access any of the money.

    Speaking with The Nation in Lokoja, the state capital, one of the aggrieved farmers, Mr. Francis Angulu said that the government has put them in a dilemma, “having invested so much in the enterprise”.

    He further alleged that farming inputs, including seedlings were sold to them at exorbitant rate by the government appointed consultants.

    He listed some of the rates at which they bought the input to include: Rice seeds – N20,000, NPK (four bags) – N34,000, urea (two bags) – N17,000, emstate (three liters) – N6,000, AgricShop – N6,000, Ag-zyme – N6,000, water pump – N55,650 and bird nets (six) – N27,000.

    The government in a swift reaction however debunked the allegations, saying that the farmers rather went about the Anchor Borrowers’ programne with an entirely wrong mindset.

    The state Commissioner for Agriculture, Hon. Kehinde Toba, said six months after the takeoff, the farmers were unable to show evidence of harvest from their rice paddies, while some of them outright sold the inputs provided them by the government, not minding that the programme is profit-oriented.

    He said, “I began as supervisory commissioner late December (2016). As at the time, Anchor programme was already on. I met them packaging it. There was dry season farming, and equipment given in February, and by June you ought to be getting harvest from the rice paddies.

    “When they took the input, some of them did not even plant, some were even selling the equipment. It is not a purely state arrangement, the CBN is backing it. And, with what they saw, the suppliers are asking for their money. So, we beckoned on them to return the equipment, since they are not using it.

    “That is something with some of them; they believe it is their share of the ‘National Cake’. They should even be sued for breach of contract. We can’t be wasting taxpayers’ money. How can I write to government to bring money; that is not how we run government here. How can they say there is foul play? There is no foul play here in Kogi State on the Anchor Borrowers’ programme”.

    Under the programme as rolled out by the CBN, six commodities, namely, rice, wheat, maize, soya beans, cotton and fish were to be cultivated by the farmers, and while their counterparts in places like Kebbi have been receiving commendations by their government over their success in its implementation, such appears not to be the case in Kogi.

     

  • Kogi’s tragic undoing

    Kogi’s tragic undoing

    CONSIDERING the comprehensive tragedy that has befallen Kogi State since January 2016, the panjandra of the All Progressives Congress (APC) must congratulate themselves on how effectively they have played Russian roulette with the fate of Kogi State. The state was poised to enter a new era of politics and development as a result of the governorship election of November 2015 in which the APC’s Abubakar Audu/James Abiodun Faleke had virtually coasted to victory. But seizing upon the death of Prince Audu and the simple administrative fact that the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) was yet to formally declare the victory, the victorious APC nevertheless exhumed a legal sleight of hand, one of a series of judicial and legislative firsts, to foist an unprepared and untested man on the state as chief executive. That man was Yahaya Bello, alias Fairplus, a politician so wet behind the ears it is safe to conclude he is bewildered by power and office, if not by his own thin and shrill shadow.

    Since last year, the state has been in turmoil, convulsed by internal dissension within the ruling party, and by bitter and acrimonious relationship between the executive and legislative branch. That acrimony constantly spilled over, month after month, sometimes manifesting in salary controversies, and at other times in labour union upheavals. The troubles reached a new peak last week when the state’s chief executive, thinking he had successfully disguised his motives and objectives, masterminded a legislative furore that tore the House of Assembly apart and brought derision upon the state. How and why the governor and his aides felt no sense of shame or remorse as the struggle assumed national significance is hard to explain.

    The struggle was supposed to be a storm in a tea cup. But the governor managed to give it wider significance. On assumption of office, the governor and his team had plotted the downfall of the Speaker of the House of Assembly, Lawal Momoh-Jimoh. To accomplish that task and enthrone a new speaker, Imam Umar, one of the enforcers deployed for that unwholesome task was the assemblyman from Igalamela-Odolu constituency, Hon Friday Sani. Barely a year and a half down the line, both Speaker Imam and Hon Sani, perhaps suffocating under the peevish and puerile leadership of Mr Bello, and deciding to call their souls their own, attempted to exert their independence from the governor and his team. Exercising independence from a philosopher-king could proceed and end without dire consequences; but doing so under a narrow-minded and visionless leader is fraught with untold peril.

    First to be dealt with was Hon Sani, whose suspension was masterminded months ago by the State House. The legislator, however, won a reprieve from the court and was due to be reinstated early last week, an act that drew the ire of the governor and his team. Worse, the Speaker, Hon Imam, having asserted his independence too, decided it was meet and proper to honour the court judgement and reinstate Hon Sani. Thus, last Tuesday, in the presence of indifferent and conniving law enforcement agents, the governor’s aides, and other sundry and freelance enforcers, all hell was let loose in the House of Assembly in actualisation of the governor’s game plan. The governor of course immediately condemned the violence, promising to arrest the hoodlums who perpetrated the act, but no one was fooled. Hon Sani was stripped and beaten, and a few days later, the Speaker himself was forced to resign. Both will tell their stories at the appropriate time, especially the moral of not riding on the back of a tiger.

    A few analysts thought the violence and the machinations were connected with the governor’s presentation of a supplementary budget for which he was anxious to receive assent. But other watchers in the state pointed out that it was not expected that anyone sat in that legislature who could dare to oppose the appropriation. It was expected to be passed post haste. So, why were the two legislative victims unhorsed? The answer was in fact much simpler and farcical than anyone imagined, said analysts. The two victims, they suggested, had to be taught a lesson in how not be independent of the State House. Mr Bello is king, nay, a potentate. No one was expected to forget that. And with his closeness to the presidency, not to say the delicate subterfuge wrought on his behalf by a conniving APC, Mr Bello is believed to be drunk with power when, given his age, he was expected to be drunk with gubernatorial and management ideas. He is leading the state down to ruin, and no one in the state occupies the moral high ground — not the lawmakers, nor his cabinet of mannequins, nor yet the soulless national APC, nor yet the mysterious and now colluding Senator Smart Adeyemi — to reprove the governor and restrain him.

    The APC at the national level is of course unfazed by all the brouhaha. It sold its conscience when, by wide-ranging conspiracy and deliberate intention to undermine ethnic and secular values, it foisted Mr Bello on the state. The last thing on the minds of the party’s panjandra was the competence of the youthful governor, or the ‘small’ matter of justice. Now that its decision has proved appalling and damaging to the state, the party has still seemed to be incapable of remorse. It appears to believe that just four years of retrogression in Kogi State should mean nothing in the face of the achievement of the party’s more primary and condemnable goals of preventing the Audu/Faleke tendency from assuming power. Four years, the panjandra think, should give the APC a breathing space to work out how to ensure the supremacy of its ethnic and sectarian agenda. Retrogression is simply nothing but collateral damage, a small price, in their estimation, to be paid for their presumptuousness in playing God.