Tag: Nigeria newspaper

  • 7 bodies abandoned in ATBUTH

    The Chairman, Medical Advisory Committee of the Abubakar Tafawa Balewa University Teaching Hospital in Bauchi (ATBUTH), Dr. Saidu Abubakar Kadas, has disclosed that seven bodies have been left unclaimed at the hospital’s mortuary.

    The Nation’s findings revealed that one of the corpses is a female while the remaining 6 are male.

    Kadas, who made the disclosure in an interview with The Nation on Saturday, said the bodies, which were deposited by the police between February and August 2019, were yet to be identified.

    He said further that the victims were casualties of road accidents within the state, who were brought by the police and road safety personnel.

    Read Also: ‘Commercial sex worker’ found dead in hotel

    ”Within this year (2019), we have had 7 bodies deposited at the mortuary between February and August.

    Apparently, none of their relations have come to claim the bodies.”

    Kadas, who alerted members of the public over the unclaimed bodies, advised that there should be regular visits to the mortuary, especially in cases of missing persons.

    He said the teaching hospital may proceed on medical evacuation once the corpses start to decompose at the morgue, adding that the hospital was yet to decide on the deadline for the relatives of the victims  to come identify them.

  • PIND foundation trains 200 Edo youths on renewable energy

    The Partnership Initiative in the Niger Delta (PIND) foundation has trained 200 youths in Edo State on renewable energy.

    Manager, Appropriate Technology Enabled Development of PIND Foundation, Dr. Teslin Giwa said the youths were trained on how to operate, install and maintain small to medium solar PV technology solutions and project management.

    He spoke at the weekend in Benin City during the graduation ceremony of the beneficiaries held at the Edo Production Centre.

    Read Also: Obaseki assures Edo youths of opportunities in creative industry

    The training which lasted for one month was done in collaboration with the Edo State government and the Skills Development for Youth Empowerment (SKYE).

    Dr. Giwa said the training was to make the youths entrepreneurs and solve the problem of electricity in the country due to incessant failure of electricity providers.

    He said the youths would be given a starter pack to go into the business and in turn, become employers of labour in the various skills acquired.

    In his words, ‘light is very important to human existence and these youths have been trained to be industrious and establish their own businesses to provide solar energy for Nigerians especially this era of powers failure.”

    Edo State Commissioner for Wealth Creation and Empowerment, Mr. Felix Akhabue, said the state government supported the initiative because of its resolve to empower Edo youths.

  • Stakeholders urge Buhari to review new board of NDDC

    Niger Delta stakeholders at the weekend urged President Muhammadu Buhari to review the composition of the new board of the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC).

    The stakeholders under the auspices of the Niger Delta Entrepreneurs Forum (NDEF) faulted the way and manner the Presidency replaced the Prof. Nelson Brambaifa-led board.

    NDEF in a statement signed by its Coordinator, Kester Okele and Secretary, Ebipade Timi, said the development was not in tandem with the style of Muhammadu Buhari-led Presidency and the Act establishing the commission.

    Timi explained that Section 4 of the Act establishing the NDDC was clear on the rotation of the chairmanship position of the commission in alphabetical order.

    “How come Edo is being gifted the chairmanship of the Board after Cross River State took the last shot?” He queried and questioned why part IV of the Act was not respected in the entire process.

    Read Also: NDDC gets acting MD, calls on Niger Deltans to work together

    He said the part of the Act provides for a Managing Director and two Executive Directors, who must be indigenes of oil-producing areas beginning from states with the highest production quantum of oil.

    Timi wondered why a state like Rivers, classified among the first three highest producers of oil, playing host to two refineries and refining the highest amount of crude oil, was left out in the appointment of the management committee of the NDDC.

    He pointed out loopholes in the procedure of the new appointments and the announcement by the Permanent Secretary, Office of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF) asking appointees to come with their updated documents.

    He noted that the previous set of appointments by the President in January was duly signed by the President’s Spokesman with a directive that the NDDC should come under the supervision of the Ministry of Niger Delta Affairs rather than the office of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation.

  • Delta PPA guber candidate, Obire, returns to APC

    In was a warm embrace and colourful ceremony on Saturday for the members of the All Progressives Congress, APC, Ward 5, Ovu, in Ethiope East Local Government Area of Delta State as the Delta State Progressive Peoples Alliance, PPA, governorship candidate in the last general elections, Dr. O’Diakpo Obire, returned to the APC, with his deputy candidate, Engr. Rex Biose and his teeming supporters of over 20,000 across the state.

    Receiving Obire at the party’s Ward 05 Secretariat in Ovu, the APC Ward Chairman Chief Ukavwe Anibor, the Exco members and notable party leaders applauded his decision to return to the party, adding that Obire is a political asset that would boost the strength of APC in Ethiope East LGA and Delta state at large.

    Read Also: Omo-Agege empowers 417 APC members, others in Delta

    The chairman said on June 26, 2018, Dr. O’Diakpo Obire who was then a bonafide card-carrying member and a frontline governorship aspirant of APC, released a press statement in which he announced his decision to quit the party due to what he described as “protracted and intractable rancour” between two factions that rocked the party over the control of its leadership in the state.

    The major highlight of the event of his return to the party was the revalidation of his membership of the APC even as he was formally welcomed back by all members into the party.

    In his response, Obire said he returned to the party after a brief sabbatical to run the governorship race on the platform of PPA, pointing out that in the last elections he ensured his supporters across the state voted President Muhammadu Buhari and the Delta Central APC senatorial candidate, DSP Senator Ovie Omo-Agege.

  • Some of the services are private/public enterprises – LASUTH CMD

    The CMD of LASUTH, Professor Adetokunbo Fabamwo, in a telephone conversation with Sunday Nation, admitted that the case of Rahamon had been brought to his attention and is being worked on.

    While he however agrees that the Lagos State Special People’s Law provides for persons living with disabilities to receive free medical care, he insists that the law must be interpreted in perspective.

    Explaining that there are certain private/public enterprises in the hospital, Fabamwo noted that the fee paying pharmacy is privately owned, and so is the x-ray centre, laboratory and canteen. So, drugs, food, and lab tests would have to be paid for because money paid by other patients cannot be used to cater to the needs of this set of people.

    He added that it’s only those things that have been provided by the government that are free, and the service of medical doctors is part of such, because the government pays their salaries. He therefore noted that accommodation, blood transfusion and even the surgery can be done for free.

    Asked why the patient was made to pay for the four pints of blood she received, Fabamwo’s response was that he knew nothing about that.

    He advised that the NGOs advocating for her to meet with him so that he could help them understand the interpretation of the law.

    Noting that the surgery would definitely be done at no cost, Fabamwo revealed that the patient would have to provide some items that would be needed for the surgery. He said he will be willing to give some concession to the patient to the best of his ability.

    He however insisted that Rahamon cannot get a completely free treatment because according, “I’m running an enterprise here and it must be well done. The reason patients come here in the first place is because they know that this place works. But if we had to make everything here free, how would the place be standard enough for people to want to come and be treated?”

  • Tivs write Taraba governor’s wife on birthday to broker peace with Jukuns

    TIV people, in Nigeria and the diaspora, have written the wife of the governor of Taraba State, Mrs Anna Darius Ishaku, over the ongoing communal crisis between Jukun and Tiv in Southern Taraba State.

    Mrs. Ishaku, a prolific lawyer, is Tiv from Vandeikya, Benue State, but married to the governor of Taraba State, Darius Ishaku, a Jukun architect.

    She had been bestowed the Tiv chieftaincy title of “Msughshima u Tiv Taraba,” meaning ‘one who comforts Tiv people living in Taraba in times of sorrow and misery’.

    Anna Ishaku clocked 64 penultimate Saturday — the day Jukun militants were suspected of attacking a Tiv village –Tor-Damsa, in Donga Local Government Area of Taraba.

    300 houses were reportedly set ablaze in the attack.

    When this reporter published Mrs Ishaku’s picture, decorated in Tiv’s famous black and white cultural regalia —anger, on his Facebook wall, announcing her birthday, a flurry of goodwill messages by Tiv folks greeted the post.

    Beneath felicitations, however, were biting commentaries urging the governor’s wife to talk to her husband to ensure the crisis between the two tribes was brought to an end.

    Cosmas Karachi Gbaa said he would not celebrate her because of the killings. “What is exciting about her birthday when others are mourning their loved ones in her domain?” He asked.

    Read Also: Buhari to traditional, religious leaders: Stop escalating Tiv/Jukun crisis

    It was gathered that the Jukun/Tiv crisis is an aged-long recurring feud, which only known cause is a claim by the Jukun that the Tiv are “settlers” in Taraba State, and ipso facto, have no ownership right to the land they occupy and should leave.

    Worried and pressured, Governor Darius Ishaku recently declared that Taraba Tiv are indigenes, contrary to the proclamation by his kinsmen.

    Ishaku’s pronouncement was expected to trigger a cessation of hostilities. But the President of Southern Taraba Tiv Youth Progressive Forum (TYPF), Kelvin Katyo, disclosed that Ikyergba —a Tiv village in Takum was again attacked and seven persons were feared killed.

    Katyo has cried out over a threat to attack them in Takum and Donga local gov ernment areas in days. He raised alarm that he has received a warning from a suspected Jukun militia group of the impending attack, adding that Tiv residents in Takum and Donga have been given a seven-day ultimatum to pack out of their homes.

    The threat has built fears in the areas, it was learnt.

    Police spokesman, David Misal, confirmed the threat but said he does not know those who issued the threat.

    “Yes, we are aware of a threat to attack some communities in Taraba and our attention has been drawn to it. But we don’t know the hoodlums or whatever group that is issuing the threat.

    “However, we are on ground to make sure we do everything possible to repel any attack by whatsoever group; whether they are hoodlums, militias and or bandits,” Misal told The Nation.

    Katyo, in a statement averred that he has lost 93 Tiv persons while 42,000 are displaced in separate attacks since hostilities between them and Jukun began in Kente village of Wukari Local Government Area on April 1.

    In his birthday letter to Mrs. Ishaku, Polycarp Tersoo Andura, a stakeholder of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Benue State, urged the governor’s wife to tell her husband to follow the footsteps of his predecessor, late Danbaba Suntai, who he said, embraced peace throughout his reign.

    His letter reads: “Ma, please tell your husband that Jukun are killing your Tiv brothers. Queen Esther used her position to save Mordecai and the Jews.

    “I believe God sent you to bring peace between us and Jukun, by marrying Darius Ishaku when he had no idea of becoming governor.

    “May the soul of Governor Danbaba Suntai rest in peace. Taraba enjoyed relative peace during his regime.

    “Baba Suntai never supported Tiv/Jukun crisis. Peace started eluding Taraba as soon as God untimely took his life.

    “The children of Israel experienced war when Ahab reigned as king, so let your hus band’s administration embrace peace. Happy birthday Your Excellency and dear mother.”

    Uvirkaa Akumaga, a Tiv Geography Lecturer in Oklahoma University, US, in his message, expressed disappointment over the renaming of Tiv settlements in Taraba State during Ishaku’s administration.

    Akumaga, who wrote from Columbia, Missouri, said: “Happy birthday ma. I am surprised, that despite the fact that you are a Tiv First Lady, the governor, who is your husband still went on to rename all Tiv settlements in Taraba State.

    “I expect a stronger unity in the land instead of hatred. Darius Ishaku’s children are both Tiv and Jukun, and so are many other kids in Taraba.

    “The hatred going on is unnecessary. We cannot allow few bad eggs to continue causing crisis in the land. We must live together as one family.”

    Terver Burbwa, an engineer, described Mrs. Ishaku as a “great woman and rare gem.” He said: “Your Excellency, I celebrate you on this occasion of your 64th birthday anniversary. We are inspired.”

    “Happy birthday ma. May the Lord grant you the wisdom to reunite Tiv and Jukun people,” wrote Targule Damian.

    Jeff Gbise wrote: “If only Tiv people could see her in every Jukun person and the Jukun see her in every Tiv person, then we all would have made her a symbol of peace. Peace is a necessity. We all must seek ways of sustaining peace.”

    The Taraba governor’s wife, described by many as a humble and God-fearing woman, is seen by Tiv as Esther —the biblical faithful and courageous daughter of Abihail, who married King Ahasuerus Darius of Persia, who saved her Jews brothers from massacre in 473 BC.

    The Tiv are urging Anna to plead with Ishaku for Tiv and tell the governor what Esther told King Ahasuerus. Historians said, when the king asked Esther what was her wish, the queen answered: “My wish is that I and my people may live, because we are about to be destroyed and exterminated.”

  • Sterling Environmental Makeover berths in Sokoto

    Sterling Bank Plc has donated more than one thousand pieces of uniforms to the Sokoto State Government as part of an effort to boost sanitation and hygiene in the state and in furtherance of the bank’s corporate social responsibility (CSR) initiative known as the Sterling Environmental Makeover (STEM).

    The uniforms, which will be passed on to the Sokoto Environmental Protection Agency (SEPA) to enhance the performance of sanitation workers in the state, are intended to give the sanitation workers an identity while on duty, according to the management of Sterling Bank.

    While presenting the overall uniforms to the Sokoto State Commissioner for the Environment, Sagir Attahiru Bafarawa, the duo of Ibrahim Aliero and Ado Shehu, Sterling Bank’s Branch Manager, Institutional Banking and Branch Manager respectively, urged the state government to intensify efforts at keeping the state clean, adding that the bank is aware that government alone cannot realise its objective of keeping the environment clean.

    According to Ibrahim Aliero, “the essence of the presentation is to compliment the state government efforts towards maintaining a clean environment.

    “At Sterling Bank, we are concerned about our business environment. The overall sanitation kits donated to SEPA is part of our bank’s corporate social responsibility idea to sustain a clean environment, more so we believe that a clean environment is important for conducive business activities.”

    “These overall kits are durable and of good quality that will endure the vagaries of the weather for a long time.”

    In appreciation, Bafarawa applauded Sterling Bank for the significant role it is playing in ensuring a sustainable environment as part of its corporate social responsibility.

    The commissioner also called on all other stakeholders to emulate the good gesture of Sterling Bank towards the state government in the

  • SHAN GEORGE: Who says major spine surgery can’t be done in Nigeria?

    Nollywood diva, Shan George has revealed that she has been battling for life for months due to spine disease.

    The veteran actress shared a photo from hospital bed in Abuja, where she said has been receiving treatment since January.

    “It was a very delicate surgery that can render me permanently paralyzed for life, if not properly done” she said.

    “Having done a laminectomy the only solution was to undergo surgery. I was so scared, the bill for such surgery runs into millions of naira” she narrated her fears.”

    She further commended the where she had the surgery done in Abuja.

    “I want to say a very big thank you to some good friends and family who went out of their way to support with d huge surgery bill, I will never forget you for supporting instead of looking for lame heartless reasons and excuses not to help. God bless you all immensely. Who says brain, spine and other delicate surgeries can’t be done in Nigeria? I’m recuperating fine. Help me thank God. I survived.”

  • The battle for revalidation and renewal of hope in Bayelsa

    Like Yenagoa, like Dubai. Both cities were founded on nothing but products of necessity some years ago. And like the proverbial mustard seed, they have grown to become the envies of their neighbours.

    The story of Yenagoa is becoming increasingly fascinating. Its foundation stones were literally laid on its pronouncement as a state capital 23 years during the days of late Gen. Sani Abacha. Many Nigerians (not just foreigners) would still mistake its geographical identity for northern Nigeria in the first five years of its existence as a state. Its journey to fame was that tortuous.

    Bayelsa’s growth trajectory was not less tortuous. What has become a prosperous state in the name of Bayelsa was nothing better than a collection of fishing communities clustering along the seas but carved out from the old Rivers State on the basis of what many considered as ‘boyish’ expectation of the military administration. Tugging on with marks of its afflictions and hard-earned crowns, the state has become a beautiful bride. For young Nigerian professionals and artisans, the crèche is now ‘see Bayelsa and live’.

    And for Bayelsa indigenes, who have remained grateful to Abacha for seeing hope amid despair and demonstrating sufficient courage to create a state for the Ijaws, the days of solitary are well over. Indeed, its time is ticking albeit so fast that its peers in the Niger Delta region cannot but see its glowing gaiety that has showed its true essence as ‘the Glory of all Lands’.

    In the intervening years, roads have been laid. Schools have been built. Bridges have been constructed. Investments have been made across critical sectors. Those who have been to the state can confirm that construction, especially roads, is not a fanciful adventure. Without determination and purposeful leadership, nothing gets done in its geographical space. It is thus not frivolous to approximate that much of the development witnessed in the past few decades was laid on the foundation of exemplary leadership.

    With its governorship election scheduled for November 2, Bayelsans are at a crossroad again. It is not a question of whether they should stick to the Peoples’ Democratic Party (PDP), which has had an unbroken reign since the inception of this democratic era or take a new wife. It is equally important to decide whose version of PDP they will adopt. Perhaps, the second question is much more significant for four reasons: Bayelsa is a traditional homeland of the PDP; it is ex-President Goodluck Jonathan’s home; the current administration is generally acclaimed to have been successful and there is a general discontent against the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    The groundswell to the PDP primaries speaks eloquently of the facts that political gladiators’ perception of the nomination as the ultimate victory. The forces and political interests are so enormous that one could only pray that ‘Beyelsans’ do not become the prey. While a study into the political horse-trading may amount to an academic adventure, unpacking the personalities in the PDP ticket grand plans is vital for linking promises with realities and characterizing the next phase of Bayelsa.

    Here are the major individuals that will be participating in the PDP primaries on Tuesday – Kemela Okara, Timi Alaibe, Duoye Diri, Reuben Okoya and Frederick Agbedi. These men have not only held tight to their political turfs as the days go by, they have also become entrenched. They have also come along in the state’s political affairs well enough to have seen governorship slot as the ultimate payoff.

    Every political actor is the ultimate arbiter of himself, and history is swift in documenting how this process affects the journey of man to perfection, the moral lessons therein and the overall gains for the society. This is the most probable lens through which the interests of the key contenders of the PDP tickets could be reviewed. Now, Okara comes across as a very important case study not only in this review process but also in the whole debate of Nigeria’s contemporary politics. Relatively new in the politics of Bayelsa, Okara, in 2012, contested the governorship race with Gov. Seriake Dickson on the platform of the Action Congress on Nigeria.

    Four years later after the political battle, Okara, who lost to the current governor, honoured an invitation to serve as the Commissioner for Industry, Trade and Investment, a portfolio considered as the dearest to Dickson’s heart. He moved on to become the Secretary of State Government, a promotion Dickson confirmed was a reward for the exceptional passion with which Okara marketed the Bayelsa offerings to the outside world and for successfully repositioning the state as destination of choice for investors and fun lovers. And Okara, with the backing of his former boss, has pulled through to emerge as an aspirant to beat in the coming primaries.

    The Okara storyline is unusually unique in this clime. And the rareness of this narrative seems to matter as much as the credentials, as a successful lawyer and advocate of justice of international repute, he throws into the race. The thought-provoking questions are: how was he able to swallow his pride to accept to work with his former political ‘enemy’ as a commissioner, taking into consideration the international brand he had built for himself? How did he work so closely with Dickson for upward of five years without suffering the ego bite that has become the albatross of the country’s political progression? How did he manage the crucial political party transition so seamlessly and evaded the usual upheavals?

    Every permutation could be true but not certainly any that borders on unspoken personality clash with Dickson. That he was able to subdue his personal ego for the past eight years for the love of his people is a crucial point for Okara going into this race. His choice of campaign key message, ‘for the good of all and the love of Bayelsa’, is probably the most authoritative explanation of his political philosophy. And if Dickson is going outside old political circle for a ‘new comer’, there is possibly something much more spectacular about Okara than the rest of Bayelsans already know.

    Luckily for the aspirant who hails from Yenagoa Local Government, his Central Bayelsa Senatorial District is mostly favoured by the party’s zoning arrangement. Come Tuesday, Okara will be adjudged by his performances as a commissioner and SSG. As a commissioner, Kemela Okara was able to articulate a clear vision to make Bayelsa a model of Africa’s economic success story. In collaboration with the United Nations Industrial Development Organisation (UNIDO), his ministry shepherded an industrial policy to leverage Bayelsa’s comparative advantage in oil and gas, power generation, agriculture and manufacturing.

    An obvious success story of his tenure was the hosting of the Bayelsa State Investment and Economic Forum (BSIEF) in 2014 and 2015. Whether he emerges as the PDP candidate and proceeds to win the election or not, Okara’s journey back home will be remembered for the opportunities the summit has created for Bayelsa to unveil its unique selling point to the highly-competitive global investment market.

    Still, there is no much one can say about Dickson’s Restoration Group without espousing the ingenuity of Okara. Inspired by the need to unveil a grand vision for the state and the Ijaw nation within the context of Nigeria’s yearning for a more glorious identity, Dickson has pursued the restoration agenda, for which Okara has become an intellectual caste, with vigor and almost commitment to the admiration of other nationalities. The mention of Okara thus reawakens the interest of the entire Ijaw in how their largest homeland transitions the agenda to successive administrations.

    Weighed against history and the available options, Okara’s aspiration is seen as purveyor of renewed hope.  But his option certainly rattles the old establishments who are also scheming and playing the sentiment card to sustain their relevance. Alaibe’s return to the trenches itself symbolizes the fight for the old system’s resurgence. What are the strengths of Alaibe coming into the race?

    Evolving with the politics of Bayelsa and serving as Managing Director of the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) under the late Umaru Yar’Adua administration when militancy became a knotty issue has endeared him to the ‘boys’. Secondly, he has a deep pocket, which matters a lot when viewed against the backdrop of the culture of cash-and-carry politics. Also, Alaibe enjoys the rare support of key members of Jonathan’s inner circle, especially George Turner. The extent to which these factors can go in delivering him is a function of the disposition of the critical stakeholders towards the old thinking.

    Of particular interest is the fact that Alaibe’s aspiration does not offer a fresh perspective to the political dynamics. Come to think of it – he has been in and out of the PDP, a trait that may have reinforced the disenchantment against his brand of politics. And if he, against all odds, wins the primaries, it is not because his camp can connect with the new aspiration of the Bayelsa but essentially because they have learnt new tricks of playing their old game differently. And this will not likely happen.

    Like Alaibe, like Reuben Okoya. Both of them are of the Jonathan political lineage with their legacies dating back to Diepreye Alamieyeseigha’s era. Interestingly, Okoya is going to the political battlefield with even more moral-bankrupt weapons.

    For one, the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) certificate saga has been a talking point as far as his aspiration is concerned. While the aspirant may have put the issue behind him, it is not particularly certain the party is ready to take over that moral burden beyond the primaries and face APC with the moral cost.

    Douye Diri, currently representing Bayelsa Central at the Senate, is definitely not a pushover. Diri shares a lot with Okara, a reason many political watchers say the interest of Dickson could be fluid in the coming days. He has the ears of the governor, having worked with him also to deliver on the Restoration Agenda. The governor may also be tempted to deliver him for envisaged political gains.

    However, there is a snag. His inability to win the 2019 senatorial election convincingly casts shadow on his personal political sagacity and strength of character. Even with the popularity of PDP in the state, Diri pooled a mere 83,978 as against APC’s 70,998 to win the Senate. Both PDP and APC have realized that this is one election neither can win from the comfort of a strategy room. They need to be on the streets to touch base with the voters, an engagement an arrogant Diri is yet to master as a politician.

    For the Bayelsa poll, the stakes are high for both political parties. It is also believed that the best will have the tickets though surprises have become an undeniable feature of the Nigeria politics.

  • If I should love again

    (To Hajia Halimat Yusuf with love)

    I won’t hesitate to play the game

    I’ll be as happy as a sand boy

    ‘cause love to me is the only thing

    That truly serves as a lifebuoy

    It simply douses fears and everything

    I tell you Lima,

    should I ever love again

    especially with someone as lovely as you

    I tell you, I won’t screw up!

    you can cross my heart to see what’s up!

    I tell you Lima I’ll do it pretty right

    as right as right can be!

    Nothing in the world will ever stop me

    I’ll go through whatever there is to go through

    And to prove that my convictions are truly true

    I’ll even go through near-death pains

    Even if it means enduring all strains

    God knows I won’t ever renege on my words

    And should I ever falter;

    you can yet have my whole head

    I’ll do all these on my honour

    If I should venture love again!

    • Ibrahim Apekhade Yusuf

    Head, Business (Sunday)

    The Nation Newspaper