Tag: NAFDAC

  • Security, others critical to economy,  says NAFDAC director

    Security, others critical to economy, says NAFDAC director

    The Director, Special Duties, National Agency for Food and Drugs Administration and Control (NAFDAC), Dr. Abubakar Jimoh, has identified security, economic transformation and manpower development as critical elements for national growth and development.

    Speaking to reporters ahead of the launch of The Presidential Diary magazine to project the Change Mantra of President Muhammadu Buhari, he said over the last two years, these critical requisites have been the focus of the Federal Government.

    He said: “In the last two and a half years of this administration, a lot has been achieved from security to economy and manpower development.”

    On the magazine, he said the publication was borne out of the need to give voice to the administration of Buhari.

    “It is a magazine conceived and designed to provide a platform for projecting the noble intentions, change agenda and vision of Mr. President. So far, we are happy that a lot of people, including doubting Thomases believe in this administration and they want to see it succeed,” said Jimoh.

    According to him, the president and his team are also happy with the group’s contribution to this administration.

    Experts say the publication is borne out of the need to give voice, resoundingly, to the administration of the President Buhari. “It is a magazine conceived and designed to provide a platform for projecting the noble intentions, change agenda and vision of Mr. President.  So far, we are happy that a lot of people, including Doubting Thomases believe in this administration and they want to see it succeed,” said Jimoh.

    He said the President and his team are also happy with the group’s contribution to this administration.  “The wife of the President, Her Excellency, Mrs. Aisha Muhammadu Buhari, the Honourable Minister of Justice and Attorney-General of the Federation, Abubakar Malami, Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, Mr. Femi Adeshina, SSA (Media and Publicity) to the President, Malam Garba Shehu and other top government functionaries have actively supported our efforts,” explained Jimoh.

    On how the idea was berthed , Jimoh said he and a host of other professional colleagues conceived the initiative to begin this magazine, “We believe in this administration, and believe also that the task of informing, educating and sensitising Nigerians cannot be left only for government agencies and their spokesmen. The Presidential Diary Magazine was conceived by a group of like-minds- those who believe in the administration of President Buhari.  These persons are made of seasoned journalists, public affairs analysts, alongside men and women, young and old, irrespective of language, culture and tribe, who believe in the change agenda of the administration,” stated Jimoh.

    He added:  “Before the coming of this administration, these persons yearned for change because they were tired of the state-of-affairs as it were.  We therefore decided to come together to rebuild this confidence in Nigeria that this government can reclaim our lost glory and take us to that pristine age.  The only channel for doing this is not by carrying out propaganda or engaging in all sorts of media hypes, but by articulating the policies and programmes of this government in this magazine; through constructive narratives and photographs of what is on ground .”

    Hinting on the edge the magazine as Jimoh said, “pictures speak volumes of words, therefore, we don’t just tell, we show.  In the last two and a half years of this administration, a lot has been achieved from security to economy and manpower development.  All these achievements are captured monthly in every edition of the magazine.  You can confirm this in every edition that you pick up.  None of these achievements and many more are left out, and we hope to sustain this as long as President Buhari remains in office to deliver on his change agenda to Nigerians in all walks of life.”

    How long has this magazine been at the public space? Jimoh explained: “Like I have said before, this magazine was conceived out of love for Mr. President and his agenda for the people.  The magazine officially came on board in 2015, months after the inauguration of this administration.  Before the debut of the magazine, I and men and women of goodwill sat down to articulate the policies and programmes of the government that was coming. When we found that they fit into the yearnings and expectations of the people, we decided to key in and give it the needed support.  It is only a blind man who will not appreciate a good soup; even at that, he should be convinced by its aroma and agrees that the soup is indeed a good one.”

    And to what extent is he achieving this task of informing and sensitising Nigerians on the policies and programmes of the government? Jimoh said: “We have never thought it will be easy to do this.  There are those who have eyes but cannot see.  There are also those who can see but are not convinced, and there are those who may be convinced but pretend they are not.  To these die-hard skeptics, we trying as much as possible to back up our facts with figures and photographs.  For instance, we cannot say activities of Boko Haram have truly been degraded by this administration without providing you with evidences.  We don’t just tell, we show.”

    On how the magazine will circulate and its targeted readership strength, Jimoh said: “At the moment, our presence is being felt all over the country.  We are in all States of the Federation, especially in States that believe in this change agenda.  We are happy to announce the support of State governments that are identifying with us.  We enjoy the support of a good number of them and that of certain individuals and corporate organizations in and outside the country.  Embassies and foreign missions of Nigeria are also identifying with us in numerous ways.

    “At the moments, many of them use and process the information contained in this magazine in rating the achievements of this administration.  Every month, we avail them of copies, the way we do to all Ministries Departments and Agencies (MDAs), group and organisations in and outside the country.  This we do without charge.  It will interest you to know that we give out every edition of the magazine free and we state it clearly ‘Not for Sale’ on the cover.  In order to get the desired effect, in terms of wide readership, we decided not to sell the magazines.  This does not mean that they are printed free.  This group of like minds including my humble self who is the initiator pulls our meager resources, time and energies together to ensure the publication of this magazine.  And we believe that our efforts and commitments to this course are not in vain.”

    What will be the fate of this magazine if the current administration is not returned to power in 2019? To this Jimoh replied: “We believe in policies and programmes that are people oriented.  For us, people-oriented programmes outlive people, governments and administrations.  Therefore, we believe that the seed Mr. President and his team is planting has started yielding fruits.  We will continue to defend and nurture them and sensitise Nigerians towards national growth and development.  So we cannot begin to contemplate this question because millions of Nigerians know that there is a silent revolution taking place now and more time is required to gain traction and firm foundation.”

  • WHO, NAFDAC partner on eradicating fake drugs

    WHO, NAFDAC partner on eradicating fake drugs

    The Federal Government has introduced drug Coordinated Wholesale Centres (CWCs) to check the menace of fake and falsified medical products in the country even as it warned that by end of December next year, all open drug markets will be shut.

    Minister of Health, Prof Isaac Adewole stated this in Lagos during a stakeholders workshop organised by the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) in collaboration with the World Health Organisation (WHO).

    The workshop was themed, “The prevention, detection and response of substandard and falsified medical products.”

    Prof Adewole said the new measures were designed to allow drugs to be sourced directly from the importers or manufacturers down to the end users instead of buying drugs from the open drug markets.

    According to him, the federal Ministry of Health had already developed National Drug Distribution Guidelines, NDDG, in 2012 to address the unsatisfactory chaotic drug distribution system of the country.

    He said coordinated wholesale centres to accommodate open market medicines sellers have been approved and are being developed in Lagos, Onitsha, Aba and Kano and CWCs will commence operation by January 1st 2019. Adewole observed that medicine is an important component of healthcare delivery service and without the infusion of medicines; the health care service delivery system of a nation is sterile.

    Prof Adewole said: “A good-quality medicine supply system is essential for healthcare delivery. There is a special need to prevent therapeutic drug falsification in order to safeguard against health and maintain trust in healthcare system. The overall scale of trading in medicine and the resultant harm done to global health has not been adequately accessed.”

    Acting Director-General of NAFDAC, Mr. Ademola Mogbojuri, said the public health implications of substandard and falsified medical products are dire and this includes treatment failure, high treatment cost, development of resistance, loss of confidence in the healthcare providers and healthcare system and may ultimately, result in fatality and death.”

    Mr. Mogbojuri raised the alarm that the problem of faking has become a serious threat to global public health. He added that the fight against this nefarious act requires sustained action by both governmental and non governmental bodies. “Single and isolated interventions cannot address the issue of substandard falsified medical products. I call for coordinated actions with international organisations to reduce to the barest minimum the incidence of the ugly menace.”

    The Acting Director-General said WHO established member states mechanism on substandard, spurious falsely labeled, falsified and counterfeit medical products following its resolution 65:19 in May, 2012 to promote public health, and access to affordable, safe, efficacious and quality medical product, across the globe.

    Declaring the workshop open, the Lagos State Governor, Mr. Akinwunmi Ambode who noted that the number of lives lost as a result of substandard medical product in the market was alarming blamed the unacceptable situation to weakness of regulatory bodies charged with the responsibility of nipping the act in the bud.

    Ambode said the capacity building workshop on prevention, detection and response to substandard and falsified medical products would improve the effectiveness of measures that have been put in place to achieve these objectives.

    He said: “It is important to emphasise that this fight must be holistic in terms of participation by all relevant government agencies including custom service standard organisation of Nigeria and the Nigeria police among others.

    ”Our efforts must also focus on identifying the sources of these products with a view to ensuring that they do not find their way into the market.”

     

  • FG appoints new acting DG for NAFDAC

    FG appoints new acting DG for NAFDAC

    The Federal Government on Thursday approved the appointment of Mr. Ademola Andrew Magbojuri as the new Acting Director General of the National Agency for Food and Drugs Administration and Control (NAFDAC).

    Magbojuri takes over from Mrs. Yetunde Oni, who attained the retirement age of 60 years last week.

    Oni served in acting capacity for 18 months following the sack of  NAFDAC”s  substantive DG,  Dr. Paul Orhii.

    Magbojuri, who is the most senior director in NAFDAC, until this appointment, was in charge of the agency’s Training and Research Institute in Kaduna.

    The new DG also served as Director of Finance and Accounts before he was redeployed to the agency’s Planning, Research and Statistics unit.

     

  • Reps to meet NAFDAC on herbal products registration

    Reps to meet NAFDAC on herbal products registration

    The House Committee on Health has assured traditional medicine practitioners across the country that it will address the problems with  local medicines registration.

    The Committee members made the promise during their oversight function visit to the Natural Medicine Development Agency (NNMDA) in Lagos.

    The committee said it would meet with the National Agency for Food Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) officials to  address the problem.

    The  House Committee on Health Chairman, Hon Beni Lar, said though it was not part of its work of the House to oversee NAFDAC,   based on the complaints by many agencies and practitioners of traditional medicine, who briefed the  members, the Committee would do assist.

    Mrs Lar said: “We all know that NAFDAC is set up and regulated by an Act and it has a Board, likewise a Committee in the House that oversees its activities. We, as Honourable members, will like to engage our colleagues that oversee NAFDAC to see how we can have a roundtable discussion to iron out some of these issues on registration of traditional medicines across the country.

    “We will want to aggregate ideas, observations and solutions across board to remove the bottle necks so that Nigerian indigenous traditional medicinal products can be easily registered by NAFDAC at affordable cost and for easy marketing, even to the point of exporting to improve on FOREX. All should know that we are legislature and not executive arm of government.”

    Mrs Lar continued: “We will beam the searchlight on NAFDAC to see what it is doing wrong in traditional medicine registration to the point of its being reputed for being slow and painstakingly difficult which lead to the demoralising the innovation of producers of indigenous traditional herbal medicines.

    “It is in the pipeline of this committee to invite all the agencies under the Ministry of Science and Technology to a meeting with NAFDAC representatives to find a solution. We will appreciate if all these agencies under Ministry of Science and Technology put in writing all their observations and hindrances to registration of their products with NAFDAC and we will be able to engage the right people on it, so we do not have these issues again.’’

    She said since NNMDA was established in 1997 to enable the Federal Government through the Federal Ministry of Science and Technology  to promote the natural medicine, it was gladdening that it had fulfilled some of the roles.

    “You’ve produced some of the best products as answers to identified communicable diseases, and some of these products are awaiting NAFDAC registration, we can’t wait to see that as a recorded success because part of the reasons for this agency’s existence is promotion of natural medicine- traditional/indigenous healthcare systems, medications and non-medications healing arts, science and technology and assist facilitate their integration into the national healthcare delivery system, as well as contribute to the nation’s wealth and job creation, social-economic growth and development effort,” she said.

    Also, she said money generated from the sales of those products would be ploughed into NNMDA.

    On the entourage of the committee are Hon Kehinde Agboola, Hon Ibrahim A. Isiaka, Hon Azodo Eucharia; Clerk, Michael Egwu and his assistant, Chukwuemeka Ejimonye and Nanre Fashep.

    NNMDA Director-General, Samuel Etatuvie, said funding and understaffing, especially of experts and researchers were the major challenges facing the agency.

    Etatuvie said: “We have done so much with little resources, including installing driers, production machines and refurbishing of the buildings where we work. We need more human resources to be on the field because our work involves research. We have submitted the list of our requirements and employment recommendations to the parent body – Ministry of Science and Technology and awaiting further directives.

    “The agency can do more with adequate funding. There are capital projects embarked on and part of them is NAFDAC registration. We are already at the final stages. Once we get the Registration Numbers that will make them to be commercially viable and we will roll them into the market.’’

    Etatuvie said his agency had documented a lot of compendia on medicinal plants  with support from Raw material Research and Development Council (RMRDC).

    “We do not want indigenous herbal healing prowess of our forefathers to go into extinction. We know generations yet unborn will tap into these compendia and make this country proud. We have published research works and findings and we are not resting on our oars. We have herbarium and data base farm and also digital library. We have a prototype solar dryer designed, constructed and installed at Jesse farm in Delta State,” Etatuvie said.

    He said to fulfill the vision of  the institute, its “funding should be improved on; likewise to get more capable hands for the agency’’.

    He identified some of the research products of the agency awaiting NAFDAC nod to include Naturedmed tonic tea based on the traditional knowledge on Nigerian Hibiscus sabdariffa as a relaxant and blood pressure reducer; improved samples of mosquito repellant; Naturemed herbal arthritis designed as topical application to assist manages arthritis; and Naturedmed medicated soap, a bath soap to assist manage topical ailments, such as scabies, fungal infections and opportunistic skin infections of HIV.

    “We are proud to be part of the solution to the 85 percent of people in Sub-Sahara Africa who depend on traditional medicine not only for healthcare delivery but also for – psychological, socio-economic and cultural, and community issues. For most of these people, traditional medicine is the only source of health care delivery known and available, accessible and affordable.

    “For all the revolutionary and dramatic improvements in human health care in the 21st Century, life in much of Africa begins and is sustained with the support of traditional medicine. In many parts of Africa, the number of traditional health practitioners far outnumber that of allopathic doctors – medical doctors is 1: 20,000 and traditional practitioners is 1: 200, according to the National Demographic and health Survey Report,” Etatuvie said.

    The DG conducted the visiting Committee round the agency’s premises, showing them some  critical equipment, such as rotary evaporator, stainless blender, rotary extractor, UV-Visible photospectrometre, PH metre, heater with Strirrer, and Atomic absorption Spectrophotometre.

    There was also digital herb scanner with printer, which Etatuvie explained, were tools for  medicinal plant identification and taxonomy for teaching, research, documentation, conservation, cultivation, and entrepreneurship development in the promotion of natural medicine and products.

  • NAFDAC union insists on strike until new DG’s appointment

    NAFDAC union insists on strike until new DG’s appointment

    The National Agency for Food and Drugs Administration and Control (NAFDAC ) workers say they will continue with their strike until the Federal Government appoints a substantive Director General.

    Mr Ejor Michael, the National Public Relations Officer (PRO), Medical and Health Union of Nigeria, NAFDAC chapter, made this known on Saturday in Abuja in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN).

    The union on Sept. 22 embarked on an indefinite strike to demand for a new DG or the appointment of the most senior director to run the affairs of the agency.

    Michael said that the Acting DG, Mrs Yetunde Oni, had been on acting capacity since February 2016 and had acted for over one year.

    “She clocks 60 years on Thursday and by virtue of public service rule she has to go but she doesn’t want to go.

    “”We, therefore, ask the Federal Government to give us a substantive DG or the most senior director in NAFDAC take over same way Oni took over as the most senior in 2016,” he said.

    The union alleged that the acting director had handed over to a director who is not the most senior.

    READ ALSO: DISQUIET IN NAFDAC AS ACTING DG STAYS PUT

    Mr Idu Isua, Vice Chairman of the union said that the next senior director was supposed to take charge after Oni had attained the mandatory age of 60 years.

    He said that the next in line to the Acting DG should automatically take charge before the appointment of a substantive DG by the Federal Government.

    In a swift reaction, Mr Jimoh Abubakar, Director of Public Relations and Special Duties, NAFDAC said that the appointment of the DG was an exclusive preserve of the President.

    He said that the controversy surrounding the appointment of an acting DG was needless, adding that the Federal Government was aware of the situation and would take appropriate step at the right time.

    “Government in its wisdom will take appropriate decision, we should not be in a hurry, government is aware of information we are not privy to.  (NAN)

  • Disquiet in NAFDAC, as acting DG  stays put

    Disquiet in NAFDAC, as acting DG stays put

    There was disquiet yesterday at the  National Agency for Foods and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) over the continue stay in office of its Acting Director General (DG), Mrs. Yetunde Oni.

    Mrs. Oni, who is presently out of the country, was due to have bowed out of office yesterday, after clocking 60 years.

    According to an internal memo dated 2010, the acting DG, who hails from Ogun State, was born on September 21, 1957.

    The mandatory retirement age for a civil servant is 60 years.

    She has been on acting capacity since February last year when President Muhammadu  Buhari sent packing heads and boards of agencies under the Ministry of Health.

    The President had since appointed substantive heads for the other agencies. Mrs. Oni is still holding forth in NAFDAC, even after reaching the mandatory retirement age.

    Besides, the government is yet to extend her stay, which has prompted some grumbling among workers.

    The Nation learnt from sources that “Mrs. Oni does not seem to be stepping down and this may likely pitched the workers against the management of the agency”.

    She had already scheduled a management meeting for September 29 – three days after her expected return to the country.

    Already, workers are becoming agitated on the situation in the agency.

    According to findings, some of the workers are planning to disrupt activities at the agency, if the acting DG fails to do the needful.

     The workers were also concerned on who would take over from her pending the time the government will appoint a substantive director-general.

    A source in the agency, who spoke to The Nation, noted that the acting DG proceeded on a foreign trip, when she knew she was due for retirement.

    The source, who pleaded anonymity, noted that “matter was even made worse as she is out of the country for a seminar or conference, when she knew that by law, she was supposed to have proceeded  on retirement leave.

    “To make matter worse, the director she handed over to before embarking on her foreign trip is not the most senior in the agency.”

    According to her memo to the Director, Planning, Research and Statistics (PRS), Mr. Adebayo Babatunde Samson, a copy which was obtained by our correspondent,   the Acting Director General stated: “I will be out on official assignment from 18th-26th September, 2017. During the period of my absence, you will act for me and therefore cover my duties.

    “You are authorised to sign all cheques and approve requests for payment for which I had earlier given approval. This also applies to all approvals given by the Honourable Minister, the President and other relevant authorities.

    “You are also to approve new requests for payment for all utility bills and others not exceeding the sum of N2.5 million in line with extant rules.”

    An attempt to get a reaction from the agency’s spokesperson, Mr. Abubakar Jimoh, on the true situation of things concerning the acting DG met a brick wall.

    Jimoh preferred to speak on the activities of the agency, which, he said, made a huge seizure of counterfeit products and some arrests.

  • FG to launch One-Stop-Shop for MSMEs in 7 states

    FG to launch One-Stop-Shop for MSMEs in 7 states

    In fulfillment of its mandate to significantly spur Micro, Small and Medium Scale Enterprises (MSMEs) the Federal Government would launch one-stop shops in no fewer than seven states across the country.

    The measure is to facilitate smoother government regulation and interface between entrepreneurs and agencies of government.

    The Vice President’s Spokesman, Laolu Akande, said in a statement on Monday that already one such one-stop shop for MSMEs in Plateau State was launched in Jos on Aug. 24, and was being housed by the Plateau State Micro-Finance Development Agency (PLASMEDA).

    According to him, the states that are next in line are Abia, Cross River, Ogun, Akwa Ibom, Kwara, Kano, Benue and the FCT.

    He said that the shops were slated to take off between September and October, adding that more of the one-stop shops are expected to be launched in other states before the end of the year.

    The one-stop-shop is aimed at bridging the information gap between micro and small investors and regulatory agencies of government.

    Such agencies include the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC), Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC), Standards Organization of Nigeria (SON), Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS), and others.

    Akande said that the MSMEs clinics which held in several States already had provided the opportunities for entrepreneurs and local producers in the MSME level to interact with regulatory agencies.

    He added that the One-Stop Shop would create an ongoing opportunity in a permanent location to achieve the same purpose.

    The One-Stop Shop programme is part of the on-going Nationwide Micro, Small and Medium Enterprise Clinics for Viable Enterprises (MSME Clinics) initiated by the Presidency in January 2017.

    The MSMEs Clinics, one of the diversification initiatives of the Buhari administration, was designed to give small businesses the opportunity to interact with the industry regulators in an effort to spur local production and harness the nation’s export potential.

    The agencies to be housed in the One-Stop Shops are the Bank of Industry (BOI), Bank of Agriculture (BOA), CAC, FIRS, SON, NAFDAC, and the Industrial Training Fund (ITF).

    Others are the Nigerian Export-Import Bank (NEXIM), Nigerian Export Promotion Council (NEPC), and Small & Medium Enterprises Development Agency of Nigeria (SMEDAN).

  • Why contaminated ‘pure  water’ abounds in Lagos

    Why contaminated ‘pure water’ abounds in Lagos

    In this concluding part of our investigative story on the conditions of different brands of sachet water sold to unsuspecting consumers in Lagos as ‘pure’, HANNAH OJO reports on the result of the second batch of 15 laboratory-tested samples randomly selected in the five divisions of Lagos. With six of the samples revealing acidic content beyond the World Health Organisation (WHO) standards, environmental factors and acute water shortage appear to be prime reasons for the contamination of water sources in the state. 

    LAGOS residents who drink ‘pure water’ would have to be more discerning in their choice as six out of another set of 15 laboratory-tested sachet water revealed high acidic content. The pH level of the six acidic water ranged from 4.64 to 6.22, falling below the WHO minimum requirement of 6.50 for potable water. Last week, The Nation had published results from the first 15 samples out of which nine samples recorded the presence of contaminants such as coliform, microbial count, acidity and pathogenic bacteria.

    The test also revealed LASPOTECH water has a slightly low pH at 6.22, with the analyst recommending treatment. The samples were selected in the month of August.

    The result of the second batch brings to 15 the number of contaminated brands out of the 30 samples taken to the laboratory. The water samples, selected between May and August, were contracted to the University of Lagos Consult Limited for a laboratory test. The physical, chemical and microbiological characteristics of each sample were examined.

    A registered public analyst and chartered chemist from the Chemistry Department of the University of Lagos issued an analyst’s certificate on each sample, in accordance with the Institute of Public Analysts of Nigeria (IPAN). The brands were coded at the time they were tested in order to conceal their brand names.

    A Consultant Public Health Physician/Epidemiologist, Prof Akin Osibogun, in an interview with The Nation, said the main danger from low pH of water (acidity) is that such water is corrosive and dissolves metal pipings, which may lead to high level of metals in the consumed water, in addition to the economic costs.

    “High pH of water, on the other hand, renders chlorination less effective and therefore increases the likelihood that bacterial agents of disease may persist in such water and when consumed, may result in diarrhoeal diseases,” Prof. Osibogun added.

    He also said that some chemical contaminants may have acute or relatively immediate toxic effects, while other chemicals may have long term carcinogenic effects.

    “There are over 10,000 chemicals now being used in industries, and careless disposal of industrial wastes is one source of pollution of water sources,” he said.

    His views were corroborated by a medical practitioner, Dr Shola Oguntona, who explained that when the pH of water is less than 7, it can be considered acidic, adding that a range of 6.5-8.5 is considered safe.

    Oguntona, formerly of the Department of Medical Biochemistry, Lagos State University College of Medicine, averred that although there are not enough scientific data to conclude that acidic water has a direct impact on health, he affirmed that there might be indirect effects causing kidney and cardiovascular diseases.

    “Accumulation of lead in children can occur faster and this can affect their growth and memory. Other effects of water contaminated by metals can be stomach upset, vomiting, dehydration from vomiting and kidney diseases,” he told The Nation.

     

    Acidic sachet water; long time coming

    The prevalence of acidic contents in some Lagos sachet water appears not to have been a sudden occurrence. Five years ago, a team of researchers at the Lagos State University College of Medicine carried out a study on contamination of sachet water produced within the industrial area of Ikeja in Lagos. Six sachet water samples were selected. The study, led by Dr Shola Ogunbona, showed that all the sachet water samples were acidic. It also showed high level of heavy metals (chromium, lead and zinc), which would accumulate in the body after long term consumption. Two other samples showed high level of chloride which was traced to industrial activities in the region where the water was produced.

     

    Human cost of sketchy sachet water

    In July 23 this year, a cholera outbreak was announced in the city of Lagos. At least two persons were reported dead, while 25 others were said to be quarantined. Another report recorded six casualties in Shomolu among whom was a five-year-old Hannah Obi, an 18-year-old simply identified as Clement and a 66-year-old woman, Risikat Okubena Majolagbe. In a space of one month, there were 26 cases and six deaths, according to records obtained from a government official, who pleaded anonymity.

    Also, data The Nation exclusively obtained from the Lagos State Ministry of Health revealed places like Epe, Ijede, Harvey Road (Yaba) and Shomolu as hotspots for cholera between 2014 and 2015. However, there are usually many unreported cases of deaths and illnesses arising from water-borne diseases as majority of Lagos residents are cut off from potable water supply.

    The Lagos State Water Corporation only produces 215 million gallons of water per day for a population of 24 million people, leaving a deficit of over 500 million gallons per day (MGD).

    The sketchy alternative citizens are faced with in the quest for potable water has resulted in the death of children. Most grievous was the death of 25 children from Otodo Gbame, a slum in Ikate Eti Osa Local Government Area in February 2016. The children died after drinking the community’s pathogen-infected water.

    Again, in March this year, there was another ‘water tragedy’ at Queens College, a government secondary school in the Yaba area of Lagos where three students died and scores of others were hospitalised as a result of a gastroenteritis epidemic contracted through contaminated water sources within the school environment.

     

    Unenviable romance with waste, effluents

    With 13, 000 metric tonnes of waste generated in the state per day, Lagos has always had an unenviable romance with waste. Sadly, there are also many industries who flout environment rules by discharging untreated effluents into waste water. This invariably has affected the quality of water aquifers in the state, leading to contamination from source in most cases.

    A geologist, Mr Olawale Alo, stated that while earth materials on the surface of water are supposed to act as filters, that may not be the case with Lagos, going by its high population density and the amount of generated waste which may infiltrate the sub-surface.

    He counselled: “With Lagos being a coastal city, toxic materials produced from waste can easily infiltrate down, thereby polluting the water aquifers. The shallower water is more susceptible to pollution. Even the deep aquifers can have the issue of marine incursion such that the water would be salty. What that means is that if people must drill boreholes, it is better to do a geo-physical survey so that the deeper aquifers are targeted.”

    The Lagos State Water Corporation is responsible for water supply across the state. Bedevilled by continuous population increase, failed public-private partnerships, inadequate budgetry allocation, poor labour practices and unstable power supply, the corporation falls short, hence leading to indiscriminate drilling of boreholes in the state. The indiscriminate drilling can send vibrations down into the soft surface of the earth, thereby paving way for environmental disasters.

     

    Eyewitness accounts

    Following the publication of the first part of this report two weeks ago, two Lagos residents reached out to the reporter to report cases of faulty water sachet samples and indiscreet packaging sighted in Lagos. Seye Joseph had no iota of doubt on August 21 when he gulped down the content of a sachet of pure water he bought from a location in Ikeja.

    He said: “I took the water in my mouth but could not swallow it. The liquid had an abhorrent taste and I quickly spat it out. I later called the number on the sachet water and all they offered were apologies. I shuddered on the ills that would have caused people because this same company also produces bottled water.”

    Another response came from Mr Femi Salawu, a communications specialist who photographed an image where a gravel truck was loaded with bags of sachet water with a man lying over them. The water did not only stand the risk of being contaminated through exposure to the sun but also from the body fluids of the person who made a bed space on top of the pile.

    Mr Salawu, who captured the image, tweeted at the reporter’s handle with the caption: “From earth moving vehicle to a sachet water carrying “motor”. Is water still life?” The image was captured at 8:51 am on 22 August tweet with the angle @citizen_gavel.

    It has been said that when sachet water is exposed to the sun and other harsh elements from the environment, they stand the risk of exposure to carcinogenic agents. According to Prof Oluwole Adedeji, a consultant with the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital, this happens when the polythene bag used to package the water is of low quality whilst being exposed to sunlight or stored under an unwholesome condition.

    “Most of these bags have pores. They have holes which may not be visible to the human eye, which allow some elements in the environment to diffuse gradually into the water. The chemicals can be very carcinogenic,” Prof Adedeji intoned as he connects poorly packaged sachet water with cancer and other terminal illnesses associated with the lungs, liver and the heart.

    Advising on best practices, Mr Oluwole Toye , the Vice President of the Nigerian Institute of Food Science and Technology, who took the reporter through  various purifying process of producing potable sachet water, said citizens have a responsibility to report sachet water producers that are not doing the right thing.

    He said: “Some people are actually just using water from the well, while others use public water system without purification. I am sure NAFDAC is also worried about the proliferation of sachet water companies.

    What NAFDAC needs to do is to ensure effective control. NAFDAC is a corporate member of our institute, so we are always engaging them on how we can be of assistance.”

     

    Safety valves

    As a safety measure, citizens can boil their water and allow it to cool before drinking, The Nation learnt.

    “Whenever one is unsure of one’s water source, it is better to boil. However, this takes care of only the biological agents that could cause disease. If you have also sunk a borehole in your premises, it will be useful to subject samples of the water to biological and chemical analysis. There are different types of filters in the market to address different iron pollutants,” Osibogun advised.

     

    Our stories, by faulted sachet water producers, ATWAP President

    Aminat Akanji, the manager of Fizco Water, one of the water samples indicted by the laboratory report, told The Nation that executive members of the Association of Table Water Producers (ATWAP) actually came to the factory to take samples of its water for laboratory test and it was certified okay, wondering what could have gone wrong while she was away on maternity leave.

    She said: “Our water is okay. I called for treatment and the pH level was checked as well. I don’t know what happened with the samples reported in the newspaper. I was away on maternity leave. But things are okay now. We have called in a chemist to maintain the treatment and things have been certified okay,” she said.

    When his reaction was sought on the acidic content of his sachet water, the producer of Two Ways Water, Mr Gafaru Wahud, said that people had not been complaining about the brand. He said: “NAFDAC inspected our factory before we got registered and we have been maintaining the standards. We always back-flush our cylinder and we change the filters from time to time.”

    Asked how often public analysts get to test the water, Wahud said the water factory, which sources its water from a borehole, had just opened. So, tests had not yet been conducted.

    On his part, the Public Relations Officer of the Lagos State Polytechnic, the producers of LASPOTECH Water, Mr. Lanrewaju Kuye, said the school would not produce substandard water, considering that it produces for the consumption of both the students of the institution and members of the public.

    “We cannot produce bad water and we always follow the standard,” he said. “We are a tertiary institution and we are also producing for the public.

    “Regarding the issue (low pH), I will ask the consultant in charge of our water factory to cross-check. If the result is true, it will be corrected immediately.”

    Also, Mr Afolabi Oluwaseyi, the producer of Jim Dee Water, which recorded a pH level of 5.65 against the W.H.O’s minimum standard of 6.50, discountenanced the test result obtained by The Nation.

    “We are doing our renewal with NAFDAC. We have taken our samples to the lab, though we have not collected the result. If there is any issue with the pH, we would have been alerted.”

    Oluwaseyi, however, promised that the water treatment plant would be recharged to boast its pH if per chance the hydrolyte has stopped working.

    Sem-Sem Water, produced in Epe, also recorded a case of low pH pegged at  6.21. Mariam Morafa, the production manager of the water factory, said a water engineer would be called to access the treatment plant.

    “This is the first complaint we have received. We would do something about it. We are supposed to do the water treatment every three months”, Morafa said, adding that the factory started production less than a year ago.

    Med Oaeses sachet water sample produced in Ikeja Military Cantonment also tested positive to high acidic content at 4.64. When The Nation visited the premises on Friday, workers at the plant declined to comment as the manager was said not to be available.

    Explaining why there is proliferation of substandard sachet water brands in Lagos and other parts of the country, the President of the Association of Table Water Producers of Nigeria (ATWAP), Dame Clementina Ativie, attributed the problem to the increasingly high cost of doing business on account of which some producers are trying to cut cost by using substandard products.

    One of the problems, she said, is excess taxation. “Too much of taxes on the industry by various government agencies results in the use of cheap production materials by some producers to meet up with government tax demands,” she said.

    She also fingered loopholes in the regulatory and supervisory mechanisms of government as part of the problem.

    Dame Ativie said: “If the industry is currently being supervised by NAFDAC, SON, Ministry of Health and Environment, Lagos State Water Regulatory Council (LSWRC), and these problems of contamination still manifest, then it means there is a missing gap somewhere. ATWAP should therefore be authorised by government to regulate and supervise the industry in conjunction with NAFDAC”.

    She also tasked government to put an end to the indiscriminate siting of water factories. “A number of factories should be determined in each geographical location. Boreholes in high density areas should be regulated due to waste water, soak-aways and the volume of contaminants in groundwater in such locations,” she said.

    “Our members are law-abiding. Most of our members in Lagos had paid for the LSWRC (Lagos State Water Regulatory Commission) borehole permit and licence.

    “We have well above 2,000 water producers in Lagos alone. We checkmate our members to make sure they adhere to the standard of operation set out by NAFDAC and other regulatory agencies.

    “We insist on our members having mini-testing kits for water to check for some basic parameters before, during and after production.

    “We from time to time organise training for our members on safety standards of production, storage and distribution of our products, considering their sensitivity to human life.”

    On measures the association is taking to combat counterfeited brands of sachet water, she said: “We are presently working on coded symbol and number to differentiate our water from any sachet or bottled water in circulation. That will be launched very soon.”

    As Nigeria joins the rest of the world to pursue availability and sustainable management of water and sanitation for all, it appears dry tapes and unwholesome production of alternative source of potable water are prime factors exposing citizens to water-borne diseases.

    Log onto www.staging.thenationonlineng.net to watch video.

    Reporting for this story was supported by Code for Africa’s impactAFRICA fund and the Bill & Melinda Gate Foundation

  • ITF to equip Plateau Technical College, train students on modern skills

    ITF to equip Plateau Technical College, train students on modern skills

    The Industrial Training Fund(ITF) is installing modern equipment at the Government Technical College, Jos to shore up the quality of its products, Mr Joe Ari, ITF Director General, has said.

    “Technicians are key to the growth of any economy; their shortage has affected the Nigerian industrialisation dream and this is why we are intensifying efforts to enhance the quality of technicians from the institution,” he said in Jos.

    Ari, who spoke on Thursday, at the graduation of 66 beneficiaries of the Women Skills Empowerment Programme (WOSEP), said that ITF would also update the skills of the students to make them “more productive in practical techniques”.

    The ITF boss lamented that the school had remained backward overtime because it was using obsolete technology.

    “With the obsolete technology the school currently uses, it is no wonder that the students keep lagging behind in practical skills; we want to change that,” he said.

    Ari, who expressed the fear that the economy would collapse if there were no quality technicians to move it, said that ITF was committed to producing highly skilled youths to explore opportunities in the emerging industrial sector.

    “With President Muhammadu Buhari’s resolve to diversify the economy in view of dwindling fortunes of the oil sector, only technicians can guarantee the steady growth of other sectors,” he added.

    Ari said that 30 women would be trained in 12 states across three geo-political zones under WOSEP, and commended the Plateau government for sponsoring 36 additional participants.

    In his remarks, Gov Simon Lalong, said that a monitoring team had been set up to ensure that beneficiaries did not sell their start-up packs, instead of opening their businesses.

    Lalong, who was represented by Mrs. Rufina Gurumyen, the Commissioner of Women Affairs and Social Development, advised the beneficiaries to train at least one person per year.

    Also speaking, Mr Haggai Gutap, Director General, Plateau State Small and Medium Enterprises Development Agency (PLASMEDA), said that the organisation would sponsor more participants in the next phase.

    “In the next phase, if ITF is training 100, the Plateau government will sponsor additional 100 participants,” he said.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the beneficiaries were trained on cosmetology, poultry production and events management.

    Mrs. Ladi Izang, one of the beneficiaries, who trained in poultry production, thanked ITF for the kind gesture, and promised that the beneficiaries would be pace setters in societal growth.

    NAN reports that the National Agency for Food and Drugs Administration and Control (NAFDAC) has promised a 50 per cent discount in the registration fees of WOSEP beneficiaries, to enable them register their Small and Medium Enterprises “without much stress”.

  • NAFDAC nabs two for selling banned injection

    NAFDAC nabs two for selling banned injection

    The National Agency for Food, Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) has arrested a man and a woman in Aba, Abia State, for selling banned Analgin injection.

    NAFDAC’s Abia Coordinator Mr. Olisa Okeke, in an interview yesterday with News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Aba, said although the woman had been released on bail, she was being monitored.

    He said the man, who also stocked the product in his shop, paid N200,000 fine, while NAFDAC confiscated the remaining drugs in his shop and sealed it off.

    Okeke said details of the suspects will be withheld for now

    “We got expired injections in a shop and found that the woman, who is the owner, is a nurse and is using Analgin injection, a banned product.

    “As I am talking to you, the woman has been arrested and is on bail. She is helping NAFDAC in its investigation.

    “We are tracing where she bought the injection. Novalgin tablet and Analgin are banned drugs.

    “We also got a shop at Umuigbo where we found analgin injection. We confiscated it and sealed off the shop. The owner has paid N200,000 fine,’’ he  said.

    The coordinator said his office stepped up surveillance on faking and sale of expired and adulterated drugs and food products in Abia last month.

    He said the rains and bad roads have not prevented the agency from discharging its duties.

    Okeke urged residents to report unscrupulous persons faking products or selling expired drugs or food products to NAFDAC.