The Federal Government yesterday confirmed the outbreak of a new strain of Bird Flu in Kano State.
Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development Audu Ogbeh confirmed the outbreak at the ministry in Abuja.
Ogbeh said the migration of birds from Europe is responsible for the outbreak, “as they stop to rest and feed at Adaeja basin before moving to South Africa”.
Ogbeh said the virus has only affected Kano State and advised farmers to take preventive measures to avoid further spread to other states.
On why there has not been a permanent cure for the virus, he said the constant change in the strain of the virus is responsible for this.
“There is bird flu in Cameroon and in Europe now, they move from Europe to South Africa in the winter, they stop in the Adaeja river basin for days to rest before they move on.
“We don’t have the vaccine yet, we are calling a meeting of all the commissioners of Agriculture to take measures to control it because there is no vaccine yet.
“We are telling farmers to try and take measures to avoid the spread of the disease.
“The strain keeps changes which is why vet doctors have not been able to find a solution to it.
“For now only Kano has an outbreak and we are controlling it, we are making sure there is no movement of chicken from state to state.
“Unfortunately those who lost chickens last year, we have not been able to compensate because we didn’t have money. We are putting some funds together to help them out.”
Tag: minister
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Minister confirms bird flu outbreak in Kano
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Abuja airport to be shut for six weeks, says minister
THE Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport (NAIA), Abuja will be closed between February and March next year, Minister of State for Aviation Hadi Sirika said yesterday.
The closure, according to the minister, will enable a construction company, Julius Berger Plc, carry out re-construction work on the badly damaged airport runway.
Sirika, who briefed reporters in Abuja yesterday after an inspection of the runway, explained that it will still be put to use during the six months of rehabilitation.
He, however, noted that the airport will be shut for six weeks between February and March, when the mid-section of the runway is being reconstructed.
According to Sirika, President Muhamadu Buhari approved the reconstruction work process through the emergency procurement procedure for work to begin because of the centrality, economy and the importance of Abuja to the country’s general administration.
He admitted that government cannot afford to close down Abuja airport for a long time, even as skeletal repairs have been ongoing at the runway in the last three months.
Sirika said: “Government has accepted the design done by the contractor and the runway will last for more than 10 years on completion early next year.”
On the six weeks closure of the airport to passenger traffic, he explained that Abuja bound passengers from any part of the world will use Kaduna airport as alternative, explaining that a robust arrangement has been finalised with Kaduna State to convey the passengers to Abuja.
On the aviation fuel scarcity, the minister said: “Talk is ongoing with oil marketers, the Ministry of Petroleum and Central Bank of Nigeria to resolve the crisis. Very soon, the country will be out of this, as we cannot be relying on Ghana for aviation fuel.” -

Sports minister orders probe of FIFA’s $1.1m grant
Barrister Solomon Dalung,the Sports Minister, has spoken on a report he received from the NFF raising queries on FIFA’s audit report of $1.1m FIFA development grant to the NFF.
“According to the report, FIFA has withheld all development funds to Nigeria for lack of proper documentation of $802,000 out of the funds released to the NFF.
“This is a very serious issue that must be given urgent attention to avoid another international embarrassment more so that the present administration under the leadership of President Muhammadu Buhari has zero tolerance for any act of misappropriation, misapplication, embezzlement or fraud in any guise.”
He directed the NFF to provide the Ministry of Youth and Sports with detailed information of receipt, disbursement and application of the FIFA development grant accordingly.
“In addition, a reputable audit firm should be appointed urgently to check the account books of the federation to ensure that funds are judiciously expended. The audit report must be made public to promote transparency, build credibility and enhance your market value,” Dalung said.
He urged the Football family to consolidate on the gains of the successes recorded so far as the country cannot afford to gamble with anything that will thwart the collective resolve to deliver the World Cup ticket to Nigeria.
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Minister lauds Channels TV at 21
The Minister of Information and Culture, Lai Mohammed, has called on the management of Channels TV to key in to broadcast digitization in order to reap of its benefits. He made this call while congratulating the station on its 21st Anniversary, saying the station has distinguished itself in its short existence.
In his goodwill message at a gala night held in Lagos on Sunday to mark the anniversary, the Minister said no accolade is too much to describe Channels on the occasion of its 21st Anniversary
“I have no doubt that for Channels Television, the future is even brighter. I say the future is brighter because this Administration’s commitment to ensuring that Nigeria successfully transits from Analogue to Digital Television will bring immense benefits, not only to Channels Television but indeed to all TV stations in the country,” he said.
According to Mohammed, with successful Digitization in 2017, at least one million jobs will be created in the next three years through the manufacturing of Set Top Boxes that will be required for each of the television sets in the country that currently boasts of 24 million Television households.
The Minister said other advantages of digital broadcasting include savings in cost of infrastructure; improved coverage quality, better picture and sound quality, introduction of mobile broadcasting, instead of just delivering television services to fixed receivers, provision of value-added services, Electronic Programme Guides (EPGs) and better utilization of frequencies.
“I have no doubt that Channels Television, a multi-award winning trailblazer, will leverage heavily on the goodies of digitization to leapfrog to the stratosphere of Television – and beyond – in the years ahead,” he added.
In his remarks, the Chairman and Chief Executive of Channels Television, Mr. John Momoh, said despite the uncertainty in the broadcast industry, through sheer determination and perseverance, Channels Television was able to blend professionalism and enterprise and emerge as a vibrant news channel in Nigeria within the last 21 years. -
Amina Mohammed still minister of Environment, says Presidency
The Presidency has reacted to reports on the purported appointment of Mrs. Amina Mohammed, Nigeria’s minister of Environment as deputy secretary-general of the United Nations (UN), saying “she remains our minister of Environment.’’
In a tweet yesterday in Abuja, Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity to the President, Garba Shehu, said Nigerians would be informed on any development concerning the matter.
He said: “There is a lot of exuberance on the net concerning a UN job for Mrs. Amina Mohammed. She remains our minister of Environment. If there is anything on this that is released officially, we will let Nigerians know.
“I am pleased to know that she enjoys so much goodwill.’’
The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that social and traditional media outfits had reported that Amina Mohammed is set to be appointed UN deputy secretary-general.
A tweet by Pamela Falk, CBS news reporter for the UN, obtained by NAN, said the world body would release a statement confirming the appointment.
She is expected to be deputy to Antonio Guterres, who will assume office as UN secretary-general, on January 1, 2017.
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Minister urges govs to support filmmakers
Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, has asked other arms of government to complement Federal Government’s effort by providing an enabling environment for filmmakers in the country.
Since assuming office, Mohammed has spoken loudly about the potentials in the film sector, describing it as a viable alternative source of revenue to oil and a great employer of labour.
The Minister who, as part of his routine tour of the film industry, attended the premiere of film, titled ‘My Name is Kadi’ in Abuja, implored Governors to encourage and support movie producers by providing incentives and creating the enabling environment for the Creative Industry to thrive in their respective states.
He said: “One of the reasons I am here today is that we need to encourage and support the movie industry from whichever part of the country. It’s the same enabling environment that we are going to provide for all of them, but I think the state governments should encourage such filmmakers also by giving them access to grants to help them because this could be very expensive. The state governments will also help by establishing cinema houses to show these films,” he said.
Alhaji Mohammed said if properly harnessed through regulatory and legislative framework, the film industry has a huge potential to contribute significantly to the development of the economy.
According to the Minister, “If you look at the GDP of California, which is largely dependent on the Creative Industry, it’s about the sixth in the world. Go to Mumbai in India and other cities, the Creative Industry is the bedrock of their economy.
“The good news here is that the artists, the film-makers, the musicians have gone far ahead and are today in a domineering position globally,’’ he said.
He disclosed that government is working with some development partners to provide data and statistics that will encourage the private sector to key into the Creative Industry by investing and making profit.
He noted that one of the challenges faced by the movie industry in Nigeria is that it’s largely unstructured, given reason government is creating a self-regulatory mechanism for filmmakers through the establishment of the Motion Picture Council of Nigeria (MOPICON) to organise and properly structure the industry.
Alhaji Mohammed decried the proliferation of guilds in the Creative Industry and said such amorphous structure will not augur well for the industry.
On the issue of piracy, he said his ministry and that of Justice are partnering to curb piracy, noting that the punishment for piracy needs to be stringent enough to discourage the unwholesome practice.
“We must protect the intellectual property of our artists. We have laws already in place but there are some people who are of the view that the punishment is not stringent enough,” the Minister noted.
He also harped on the need to discourage Nigerians from patronizing pirated products through advocacy to create awareness on the dangers of piracy to the nation’s economy.
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Minister: emulate traditional healers
There is the need for orthodox medicine practitioners to borrow a leaf from traditional medicine practitioners.
According to the Minister of Health, Prof Isaac Adewole, who briefed Health Editors in Lagos to mark one year in office, traditional healers show empathy to their clients and their services are accessible and affordable.
Adewole said there were many areas of traditional medicine that more Nigerians could benefit from. Some of them, according to him, are bone setting and healing with herbal plants, saying that his ministry will explore how to assist herbal healers on how to improve their practice, especially in standardising their products.
‘That will help us as a country to export them, instead of the plethora of foreign herbal products that have taken over the market. We have a lot to learn from China and even Ghana, but gradually we are getting there. The way traditional medicine is now can’t be compared with what obtained some centuries ago,” Adewole said.
He said Nigeria was in the forefront of research and development of herbal plants. “A quick search into NIPRID shows how indigenous herbal-plants have been researched, developed and packaged into life saving products, so we have a lot to boast off in that sector. We only need to hone the skill of the practitioners,” he said.
According to World Health Organisation (WHO), traditional medicine is the sum total of the knowledge, skills, and practices based on the theories, beliefs, and experiences indigenous to different cultures, whether explicable or not. It is used in the maintenance of health as well as in the prevention, diagnosis, improvement or treatment of physical and mental illness.
“To ensure that this sector is regulated, WHO came up with the International Regulatory Cooperation for Herbal Medicines (IRCH). It has 33 member states. Nigeria is not inclusive.
“International Regulatory Co-operation for Herbal Medicines (IRCH) is a global network of regulatory authorities responsible for regulation of herbal medicines, established in 2006. Its mission is to protect and promote public health and safety through improved regulation for herbal medicines.
“Membership is open to any national regulatory authority responsible for the regulation of herbal medicines and regional/sub-regional bodies responsible for the regulation of herbal medicines.”
It is on record that Nigeria was aware of the first WHO Congress on traditional medicine, otherwise called “Beijing Declaration”. The Beijing Declaration serves to promote the safe and effective use of traditional medicine, and call on WHO member states and other stakeholders to take steps to integrate TM/CAM into national health systems.
It required that member states shared national experiences and information in five areas, which would aid countries in taking further action in the future: National Policy on TM/CAM; National Regulation of Traditional and Herbal Medicines; TM in Primary Health Care; National Regulation of TM/CAM Practice and Research on TM/CAM.
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Minister advises Nigerians to brace for telecom data price increase
The Nigeria Communications Commission (NCC) yesterday said it intervened with an interim price floor for data services to avert a looming price war in the telecommunications sector.
But the Communications Minister Adebayo Shittu has asked Nigerians to brace for a price rise.
The regulatory commission said it feared that the price war could eventually lead to a monopoly in the telecom industry that would force small operators to shut down.
It said that monopoly in the telecom sector could also push the country back to the days of NITEL – the troubled governenmt-owned telco – to the detriment of small operators.
NCC Executive Vice Chairman Prof. Umar Dambatta stated this when he appeared before the Senate Committee on Communications.
The committee was mandated to investigate the proposed data tariff hike said to have been ordered by the NCC.
Committee Vice Chairman Senator Solomon Adeola, who presided, noted that there was a public outcry over the proposed increase.
Sen. Adeola said Nigerians were united in their opposition to the proposed increase.
He said the position of Nigerians was that a tariff hike was ill- advised, especially with the biting economic situation.
Dambatta told the committee that the NCC’s intervention was not designed to undermine consumers.
He noted that if cheap prices were introduced, they may end up undermining the telecom service operators.
He said if the situation arose where the operators could no longer cope, the consequences could be better imagined.
Dambatta said the need to avert a crisis in the industry informed the decision to introduce interim price floor for data services at N0.90k per BM.
He said: “We wanted to protect the Nigerian consumer from unhealthy price war in what may lead to a monopoly that may lead us to the days of NITEL. We did not increase any price but merely provided a regulatory standard to protect small telecom operators.”
Dambatta said there were some telecom operators that lacked the capacity to compete with the big operators.
He said the N0.90k price floor for purchase of data was a benchmark below which no operator could sell.
“We said in the interim directive measure that no operator should sell below 90k per megabite. There was a price war in the market; that was why we issued the interim directive.
“A situation where a dominant operator provides services far below what is obtainable in the sector in order to attract more customers may lead to a situation where smaller operators will be forced to shut down,” he said.
Dambatta, who said there was a mix up of the interim directive, noted that instead of increase, the NCC wanted reduction in price of tariff to create a balance between big and small operators.
He said the NCC did not set any price ceiling but provided a price law.
Dambatta added, “ We stepped in when we noticed a price war in the sector. The price war was already reaching undesirable level that we had to step in to prevent a monopoly like the days of NITEL.”
The interim floor price, he said, has been suspended temporarily to allow for further consultations.
Dambatta said the NCC would conduct extensive research to come up with a price floor that would be acceptable to Nigerians.
The Minister said the reality was that telecom service providers are operating in an unfriendly business environment, including lack of electricity and increasing security challenges.
He said: “This is one area that I believe that we all must face the reality… If you look at the NCC law, it is positioned to reflect experiences, expertise and all of that and I want to believe that there must not be too many interventions in the activities of the NCC.
“I am a political office holder. I am not an expert, so I cannot venture to say whether they did wrong or right, except they say that the constitution has granted them the role of a supervisor of a direct regulatory authorities, particularly relating to the activities in the telecoms industry.
“The only area I feel they were deficient was in the area of communicating with the people of this country, particularly because of the sensitivity that has been imposed on Nigerians by the harsh economic situation.
“I know that if you want to make omelet you must break eggs. Unfortunately in this country, we fail to appreciate the transformation role that ICT has brought about in the lives of Nigerians.
“I keep saying this, and I have no apology in saying this, before 1999, GSM lines in Nigeria were less than 500,000. Today, we have well over N152 million lines. All the hustles that Nigerians were going through before the exponential development of ICT are no more with us.
“It is also important to say that operators in Nigeria are operating on a very harsh situation, which is not known in other advanced countries. For instance, over the years, the Nigerian state has not succeeded in fixing electricity over the last 20 years.
“This industry’s reliance on electricity and because Nigeria has failed in providing reliable electricity, it means they have to rely on extra budgetary provisions to provide electricity 24 hours, seven days of the week, which additional expenditure does not operate in other countries which we seek to copy. This is one challenge that we must look at.
“The other challenges in the area of security; a lot of infrastructure by operators are usually under coma by criminals all across the country. Indeed we know what the security situation is in the country. Apart from that we also have the problem of taxes which they have always be talking about. I have always challenged operators that I want to see all the taxes so that we find a way of harmonising them.
“What I am saying is this, if Nigeria has invited international investors to come and invest in Nigeria so that our lives will be better, so that the economy will be better, so that businesses can be more conveniently made, so that even government can run more conveniently, to whom much is given, much is expected.
“The Nigerian state must also be in a position to provide its own share to make an enabling environment operate properly.
“So, I am not supporting at this stage or not supporting the price increase with regards to the floor. But what I am saying is, these are technical issues whose decision must be taken having regard to all the factors that are important before a decision can be taken.
“I am appealing to the distinguished senate in intervening, they should try to encourage NCC to be the best that it can, they should try to assist us (NCC) in the area of holding the balance between the interest of operators and the interest of the Nigerian masses so that we can be seen to be providing the best.”
MTN CEO Mr. Ferdinand Moolman, who was also at the hearing, said that the industry had been operating without data floor since 2015.
He underscored MTN’s commitment to ICT development in the country.
The MTN boss also stressed the need for a long time overview of the industry.
He was emphatic that the industry needed to be health to continue to grow.
Moolman said: “MTN remains unrelentingly committed to the sustained provision of affordable and accessible voice and data services in accordance with the National ICT and Broadband plan. In line with this commitment and to continue the provision of high speed data services to its esteemed customers, MTN recently bid for, and acquired the 2.6GHz LTE spectrum at the cost of US$96million.MTN also launched 4G LTE services, enabling faster access to digital platforms and igniting socio-economic development with a multiplier effect on the economy.
“MTN actively contributed to the development of the National Broadband Plan, and has consistently taken every step to facilitate the achievement of Government’s objectives of pervasive, cost-effective and sustainable access to data services by all strata of Nigeria’s population. The company continues to be an ICT development partner to the government and people of Nigeria.
“Telecoms’ Contribution to National Socio-Economic Development and Factors Constraining Industry Sustainability
“MTN is committed to continue its efforts to provide the best data network to the people of Nigeria. In this regard, however, there are a number of factors that impact the sector’s sustainability such as:
“The rise of headline inflation to about 17.9%
“The depletion of operator revenues by unlicensed providers of “over-the-top” telecoms services who do not have any physical presence; nor pay any taxes; nor make any significant contribution to employment or other socio-economic objectives of government in Nigeria;
“The inability of operators to access foreign exchange (this is particularly debilitating given that most of our inputs are sourced off-shore). This has very significantly increased both operating and capital expenses.
“Despite these macro-economic challenges, telecom tariffs have declined significantly (over 67% between 2007 and 2016) and data prices are amongst the lowest on the continent. With this in mind, MTN looks forward to the cost study as confirmed by the NCC, and remains committed to working with the Regulator and Industry to ensure fair value and fair competition in the Nigerian market.”[poll id=”7″]
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Minister to trade unions: follow dispute settlement procedures
Minister of Labour and Employment Senator Chris Ngige has urged the organised labour unions to follow dispute settlement procedures, warning that strikes and lock-out are inimical to national growth.
Ngige, who was represented by the Permanent Secretary, Dr. Clement Illoh, spoke while opening the 9th Triennial National Delegates Conference of the Association of Senior Staff of Banks Insurance and Financial Institutions (ASSBIFI).
He said: “I urge you to avoid protest, strikes, lock-out and non-adherence to grievance settlement procedure, as they are ill-winds that do no good to the economy.”
Ngige added that social dialogue was essential to the maintenance of industrial peace and harmony in work places and for socio-economic growth of the nation.
The minister reiterated the commitment of President Muhammadu Buhari-led administration to bringing positive change in the conduct of government’s businesses, instill discipline in the citizenry and promote transparency and accountability in public sphere.
He emphasised that trade unions are major contributors to National Development.
“Historically, trade unions as partners in progress have contributed immensely to the national drive and process of instilling discipline, transparency accountability and patriotism among their members as they constitute a major segment of the national populace,” Ngige said.
Trade Union Congress of Nigeria President Comrade Bobboi Bala Kaigama, eulogised the outgoing Comrade Sunday Olusoji Salako-led executive of ASSBIFI, urging members of the union to extend same solidarity and spirit of comradeship to the newly elected leadership of ASSBIFI.
Salako emphasised the important of unity among unions’ members. -
Minister inaugurates committee to review tourism master plan
THE Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, on Wednesday inaugurated the Technical Committee on the Review of Nigeria’s Tourism Master Plan, with a call on members to articulate realistic policies that will drive tourism from the periphery to the mainstream of the economy.
Speaking at the inauguration in Abuja, the minister said even though the tourism master plan was designed in 2006, a plan of action to implement it was abandoned half way hence the need for members of the committee to review the plan in consonance with contemporary challenges and realities and the peculiarities of Nigeria.
“This team is to review our own tourism master plan and see which aspect of that master plan needs to be reviewed in consonance with what has happened both in terms of technology, politics and even in terms of climate change.
“We are talking about reasonable and sustainable tourism because what we are offering to the world in terms of cultural and natural resources are also dependent on mother nature, and you must make sure that we do not expend it or expose it in a manner that children unborn will not have anything to show for it,” he said.
Alhaji Mohammed said part of the drive of this administration to make tourism one of the pillars of the nation’s economy is the resuscitation of the Presidential Council on Tourism (PCT) and the review of the master plan.
He said the Steering Committee on the PCT had already commenced the drafting of the council’s agenda which will be handed over to the president.
The minister also disclosed the readiness of the United Nations World Tourism Organisation (UNWTO) to assist Nigeria in the review of the
master plan, having contributed immensely to the drafting of the initial plan.
He underscored the need to develop a synergy among all sectors ofgovernment, the private sector and the local community in order to have a multi-sectoral approach towards the development of tourism in Nigeria.”The thing about tourism is that it’s probably the most inclusive ofall endeavours in life,” Alhaji Mohammed said, noting that in tourism, the ministries of agriculture health, power, works and housing and even trade and investment are all important, ”and until we take this on board we will not be able to transit from being a country of huge tourism potential to a country’s whose economy will be driven by tourism and this is the beginning”.
Members of the Review Committee include representatives from the Federal Ministries of Information and Culture, Interior, Budget and National Planning, National Institute for Hospitality and Tourism, as well as the National Association of Nigeria’s Travel Agencies.