Tag: Nigeria newspaper

  • Lagos gridlock: IYC urges FG to open N’Delta ports as way out

    The Ijaw Youth Council (IYC) has urged the Federal Government to direct the Ministry of Transport to open the neglected sea ports in the Niger Delta to decongest ports in Lagos.

     

    Its leader, Mr Roland Pereotubo, on Wednesday urged the government to direct importers and exporters to the ports in Niger Delta area to reduce the gridlock in Lagos ports.

     

    “As the nation is groaning over the congestion of the sea ports in Lagos, which has been causing gridlocks in the city, IYC wishes to draw the attention of the relevant authorities to the litanies of sea ports in the Niger Delta.

     

    “The ports in the Niger Delta have the capacity to decongest Lagos ports, but Niger Delta region has been deliberately abandoned, segregated and marginalised for long by successive Nigerian governments since independence.

     

    Read Also: ‘How to end building collapse in Niger Delta’

     

    “In Delta State, we have a deep seaport and a dockyard in Burutu Island at which mother vessels can load and off load goods.

    “We also have Koko, Warri and Sapele ports that can take care of the problem in Lagos.

     

    “The proposed Deep Sea Port at Agge community in Bayelsa State is another economic hub of the country. This also has been abandoned.

    “Again, the Calabar port in Cross-Rivers state is another viable economic hub that has received no government attention.

    “All these ports and others in the region if revamped will solve the problem in Lagos.”

    NAN

  • Ngige urges NARTO to sustain partnership among members

    The Minister of Labour and Employment, Dr Chris Ngige, has called on the Nigerian Association of Road Transport Owners (NARTO) to sustain more collaborative partnership among members.

     

    Ngige, represented by Alhaji Idris Idris, made the call at the NARTO 18th Annual General Meeting in Sokoto on Tuesday.

    The minister said: “I want to use this forum to appreciate your association for working in collaborative partnership with your members.

     

    “This has in no small measure contributed to sustaining industrial peace and harmony as a major prerequisite for economic growth and development.

    “In this regard, I wish to reiterate that my ministry places much emphasis on social dialogue.

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    “As such, I want to state without equivocation that the doors of my office will continue to remain open to achieve this objective.’’

    He called on the participants at the conference to give it all the necessary seriousness it deserves.

    “All hands should be on deck to ensure the success of the conference, as I have no doubt that the outcome will significantly strengthen your association in attaining its statutory mandates.

     

    “This will provide a conducive environment for the maintenance of industrial peace and harmony which is a catalyst for socio-economic growth of our nation,’’ Ngige said.

     

    In his message, Gov. Aminu Tambuwal of Sokoto State, represented by the Secretary to the State Government, Prof. Bashir Garba, commended NARTO for selecting the state for the meeting.

    Tambuwal called on the association to continue to focus on modern and latest means of transportation of goods and services across the country.

     

    “The transport sector been a crucial sector that played important role in the movement of goods and services; hence the need to focus more on modern system to be fully sustainable.

     

    “It is in view of this that the Sokoto State Government formed a committee to look into the activities of NARTO and the National Union of Road Transport Workers (NURTW) in the state, ‘’ he said.

     

    Earlier the President of NARTO, Alhaji Kassim Bataiya, commended the efforts of the Federal Government in the area of road construction in many parts of the country.

     

    Bataiya called for the dualisation of Makera-Kontagora-Yauri-Jega-Sokoto Road and upscaling of the security arrangement on Birnin Gwari-Kaduna Road to stop the incessant kidnapping of people on the road

  • Bayelsa solicits public support for war against cultism

    The Bayelsa Government on Friday solicited the support of the citizens for the current efforts to curb the rising menace of cultism in the state.

    Dr Boma-Spero Jack, the Special Adviser to the Governor on Security Matters, made the call via a statement in Yenagoa.

    Jack expressed concern about the increasing cases of cultism, armed robbery and other related crimes, particularly in Yenagoa and its environs.

    He condemned the recent killing of Miss Seiyefa Fred, a 16-year-old 100 level student of Niger Delta University, by suspected cultists in the Amarata neighbourhood of Yenagoa.

    Sympathising with the families of the deceased, the security adviser expressed the government’s commitment to putting in place adequate security measures to safeguard the people’s lives and property.

    He urged the members of the public to see security as a communal activity which involved the input of all the citizens, the police and other security operatives.

    He added that the citizens should always provide useful information that would facilitate efforts to safeguard the society.

    Jack, who attributed the current wave of crime in the state to cultism and use of hard drugs by youths, assured the citizens of the government’s plans to improve the security architecture of the state.

    According to him, the government is particularly collaborating with the state special security outfit, tagged “Operation Doo-Akpo’’, to effectively combat crime and criminality in the state.

    He said that the government was committed to putting in place more crime-prevention machinery, in partnership with the police and other security agencies.

    Jack, however, called on law enforcement agencies and the judiciary to take advantage of the state’s anti-cultism laws, which gave them the right to detain suspects for up to 60 days during investigations.

    “In an effort to eradicate cultism and other related vices, the judiciary and prosecuting agencies must work hand-in-hand to assist government through speedy dispensation of justice,’’ he said.

    He urged members of the public to always call 07006464644 — the special dedicated phone line of “Operation Doo-Akpo’’ — whenever they were in distress so as to provoke quick response.

    Jack criticized community leaders and other personalities who were fond of defending and pleading for apprehended criminal suspects, adding that they should desist from such acts and allow the law to run its course.

    He bemoaned the frequent redeployment of police commissioners to the state, saying that it was one of the causal factors behind the current security situation in the state.

    NAN

  • Community fetches beef as train crushes ten cows in Ogun

    Residents of Kajola Community in Ogun on Friday counted their blessings as they freely fetched beef from 10 cows killed by a train.

    The men and women including commercial motorcyclists and passersby used knives, cutlasses to cut from the lifeless cows.

    The train, which took off from Lagos, headed for its final destination, Kajola Terminus, when it ran over the cows which were crossing rail track at 11.50a.m.

    The cows were finding food when they crossed the rail track.

    The herders seemed to be caught unawares.

    No human life was lost to the accident.

    Some of the residents who spoke with our reporter said that the herders had been warned to desist from bringing the animals near the track.

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    They also said that the meat would waste if people would not fetch them.

    One of the residents, Mr Adeola Paseda, told our reporter that he fetched beef that would be enough for his family for at least a week.

    “I am one of the residents that got here first; I have meat that can last for a week,” he said.

    Mrs Bola Akanni, who was carrying a basin of beef, said, “Times are hard now; if we do not take the meat, it will amount to waste of an opportunity.”

    Mr Fatai Akeem, told our reporter that he was alerted by his friends immediately the accident happened.

    He said that he was sad to see pieces of beef littering the track.

    “I watched as people cut meat in basins and took them to their houses.

    “The herders lost a lot because they could not listen to advice not to bring cows near the rail track,” he said.

    According to our reporter pieces of beef littered the track as the residents continued to fetch the beef.

    The owners of the cows were not seen as at the time of the report.

    NAN

  • We have delivered visible achievements – Fashola

    Mr Babatunde Fashola, the Minister of Power, Works and Housing, says his ministry has delivered visible and qualitative achievements to Nigerians since his appointment in November, 2015.

    Fashola said this on Monday in Abuja at a media briefing to give the third year progress report of the ministry under his watch.

    He said the ministry had in a statement titled “Setting the Agenda for Delivering Change” in December 2015 set out what it inherited, plan to do and what Nigerians should expect from it.

    According to him, as at May 2015, many contractors have stopped work because of payment and many fathers and wives employed by them have been laid off.

    He said the possibility to return those who had lost their jobs back to work was the kind of change the ministry promised Nigerians.

    Fashola said that the progress report on public sector works relating to roads and bridges had confirmed that the ministry had fulfilled its promise.

    He said that the ministry had recovered the thousands of jobs that were lost as a result of an expansive infrastructure spending on works from N18.132 billion in 2015 to N394 billion in 2018.

    “The outcome is that there is not one state in Nigeria today where the Federal Government is not executing at least one road project with construction workers engaged on the sites.

    “Difficult or abandoned projects like the Second Niger Bridge, Lagos Ibadan Expressway and the Bodo-Bonny Bridge have been brought back to life.

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    “Sections of Ilorin-Jebba, Sokoto to Jeba, Sokoto-Ilela have been completed, while progress of work continues nationwide.

    “Apart from recovered construction jobs and growth in construction sector of the economy, the feedback from road users is that the journey times are reducing on the completed roads,” he said.

    According to him, we acknowledge that the work is not finished, but as long as we remain able to finance the projects, I have no doubt that it will get better.

    He said that the ministry had extended its intervention on roads to universities to ensure that unattended internal roads were given attention.

    The minister said that 14 Federal Universities would benefit from the first phase of the intervention under the 2017 budget adding that more would be accommodated in the 2018 budget.

    NAN

  • Fayemi’s Wife tasks theatre artists on peace building

    Wife of Ekiti State Governor, Erelu Bisi Fayemi, has tasked theatre artists to use their profession to peace and unity in Nigeria.

    She said arts is a veritable weapon to ensure stability of the country at a critical period in her history.

    The governor’s wife made the remarks on Thursday while declaring open the 31st Annual Convention and International Conference of the Society of Nigeria Theatre Artists (SONTA) holding at Federal University, Oye Ekiti (SONTA)

    The general theme for the convention is “Theatre, Counter Terrorism and the Nigerian Space.”

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    Leading playwrights, authors and theatre arts scholars like Professor Femi Osofisan, Prof. Shamsudeen Amali, Prof. Bode Sowande and Prof. Olu Obafemi were present at the opening ceremony of the conference.

    Mrs. Fayemi who described artists as storytellers, advocates, teachers and truth tellers urged them to be in vanguard for a better Nigeria through their works.

    FUOYE Vice Chancellor, Prof. Kayode Soremekun, said the general theme was apt at a time the country was going through security challenges.

    Soremekun said terrorism goes beyond the Nigerian space noting that terrorism also has sanctuary across the borders.

    SONTA President, Professor Alex Asigbo, said the body was using the conference to contribute to peace building in Nigeria.

    Mrs. Fayemi, her Benue State counterpart, Mrs. Eunice Orton, Professor Soremekun, the Clerk of the National Assembly, Alhaji Mohammed Sani Omolori and an Information Technology investor, Mr. Babatope Agbeyo received awards at the event.

  • Lecturer drags Osun Poly to court over alleged unlawful termination

    Justice Opeloye Ogunbowale of the National Industrial Court, Ibadan Division, on Thursday adjourned until December 11, 2018 a suit filed by Mr Ayobami Lawal, a former Dean of Faculty of Mass Communication, Osun State Polytechnic, Iree.

    The suit also joined the governor and attorney general of the state as co-defendants.

    In the suit filed on his behalf by his counsel, Mr Adenle Adetoye, Lawal is seeking a declaration that the termination of appointment was unjust and unlawful.

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    The 62-year-old also prayed the court to immediately reinstate him as the Chief Lecturer and Dean of Faculty.

    The News Agency of Nigeria reports that the plaintiff claimed he was unlawfully disengaged on January 11, 2016, while serving as the dean.

    According to him, the school claimed that it laid him off for not developing himself academically.

    He alleged that it was a ruse to get rid of him because he was an independent minded person.

    The plaintiff claimed that he was employed in the school with HND and a Masters of Communication Arts from the University of Ibadan.

    However, when the matter came up for hearing, the claimant’s counsel asked for a short adjournment date, to file for an amendment of the suit.

  • NGO provides educational support to girls in Kaduna

    A Kaduna-based Non-governmental Organisation (NGO), Empowering Women for Excellence Initiative (EWEI) says it will provide education subsidy to girls.

    It said that the subsidy would be given to the girls in public secondary schools to promote their retention and completion rate in Kaduna State.

    Miss Bilkisu Gwabin, EWEI’s Finance and Supplies Officer, made this known in Kaduna on Thursday, at the opening of a one-day Empowerment Seminar for 10 new beneficiaries.

    Gwabin explained that the support, under the NGO’s Educational Subsidy Programme (ESP), supported by Inti Raymi Fund, was designed to assist the students with fees, uniforms, and learning materials.

    According to her, the goal is to improve retention and completion rates of female students in public schools to enable them to acquire basic education and live a quality life in future.

    “The beneficiaries also benefit from EWEI’s empowerment seminar where young girls are equipped with productive life tips and income generating skills’’.

    Mr Babatunde Ajiga, EWEI’s Board of Trustee Secretary, explained that 13 girls had benefited from the programme from 2008 to 2017.

    According to him, 40 per cent of Nigerian children from six to 11 years of age are not in school, adding that EWEI’s programme was to support the education of intelligent girls from poor families.

    Mrs Grace Attah the NGO’s Programme Officer, Organisational Development and Learning, said that the beneficiaries were selected based on needs, ethnicity and religion.

    Attah explained that 10 new beneficiaries were selected to benefits in 2018, from Government Girls Secondary School, Doka, Government Secondary School, Television and Government Secondary School, Barnawa.

    Also speaking, Safiya Garba, the Founder and the programme Director of the NGO, commended the Kaduna State Government for taking steps to provide free education to girls in the state.

    “Although we do not know what it would cover and for how long, we nonetheless, want to ensure that we prepare secondary school girls and equip them with income generating skills to support their tertiary education.

    “We provide long term support to the girls up to the end of secondary school and provide additional six months life skills support as intern in EWEI, to develop their leadership capacity.

    “What we expect in return is for the girls to do well in school,” she said.

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    Garba called on parents of the beneficiaries for support to ensure that the girls’ study hard and grow up to be leaders in their homes, their communities and the nation at large.

    “Let’s work together to ensure they all finished secondary school and excel beyond.”

    Mr David McGrain of Inti Raymi Fund expressed joy that the fund had helped put a smile on young girls’ lives and pledged to do more.

    McGrain told the beneficiaries that they could do anything in life if they remained focus.

    One of the beneficiaries, 20-year old Jessica David, said she had been a beneficiary since 2014, describing the support as a life changer that had added value to her life.

    “Besides taking care of my educational financing and providing the needed learning materials, the NGO had equally equipped me with income generating skills which is helping me take care of my financial needs.

    “EWEI also enlightened me on my rights as a lady and how to set long term goals for a meaningful future, and thanks to them. I am soaring higher and higher to my goals,” David said.

    Another beneficiary, Mary Ayantokun, 19, said that EWEI paid her school fees from junior secondary school until she graduated from secondary school.

    “EWEI paid my fees for WAEC, NECO and Joint Admission and Matriculation Board examinations. I am so thankful to this life-changing support.

    “Not only that, I have learned several income generating skills like beads and cake making and other self -reliant skills that are helping me meet my financial needs.”

  • Man docked over alleged theft, malicious damage

    A 35-year-old unemployed man, Dapo Samuel, was on Thursday docked before an Ijede Magistrates’ Court in Ikorodu, Lagos, over alleged stealing and malicious damage.

    The Prosecutor, Inspector Aminu Isaac, said that the accused, whose address was not provided, stole a sub-massive water pumping machine valued at N40, 000.

    Isaac also said that Samuel damaged a pumping machine water pipe worth N25, 000.

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    He said that the property belonged to Mr Fatai Aluko of 40, Dada St., Itunpate area of Ikorodu.

    Isaac told the court that the accused committed the offences on Oct. 20 at Noble Professional Estate, Ikorodu.

    He said that the offences contravened Sections 287 and 350 of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, 2015.

    The accused, however, pleaded not guilty to the charges.

    The Chief Magistrate, Mrs A. Oshodi Makanju, granted the accused bail of N30, 000 with one surety in like sum.

    Makanju adjourned the case until November 1 for hearing.

  • Bromate: Your beloved bread may be a cancer agent

    14 years after the NAFDAC ban on carcinogenic bromate, researches across the country have raised questions over compliance by bakers and whether the regulatory body is indeed ensuring compliance. Muneer Yakub reports.

    Confronted with the likelihood of developing cancer due to his regular consumption of the banned bromated in bread, Abdullahi Shehu (not real name) who could best be described as a bread addict, with a deeper affection for the popular ‘Agege bread’ simply exclaimed, “Cancer? From where? Bread that we have been consuming for decades?”

    “How did you arrive at that?” he asked, with shock, disbelief, and a little bit of fear, clearly written over his face, even as he announced that he was planning on having another loaf for dinner.

    Shehu claimed his burning love for bread was borne out of his inability to cook other meals, save noodles; adding that “bread, especially Agege bread, always surfaces as the way out.”

    Asked if he would quit consuming bread, having heard its health risks, Shehu confessed that he probably wouldn’t. “I’m just in love with bread,” he said, with a sorry-to-disappoint you look. “I can’t quit it, I can’t afford to miss it; I’d rather keep praying for protection.”

    Bread, bromated and Cancer

    Bread is one of the most staple, cheap, fast foods in Nigeria. It is widely eaten and ubiquitous in many households.

    Because most consumers prefer it soft, fluffy and smooth, the use of artificial enzymes and chemicals, dubbed improvers, able to provide these qualities became common in bakeries.

    Amongst these improvers is potassium bromate, which was banned by the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control, NAFDAC, as far back as 2004, due to its link as a cause of cancer and many other deadly diseases.

    A decade and half after, however, The Nation gathers that some bakeries across the country still use the substance to bake bread.

    The Nigerian regulatory body took the cue from the World Health Organisation, which had proscribed the use of the substance as a bread baking ingredient in 1992, having proclaimed it as carcinogenic.

    Besides cancer, bromate has also been discovered to cause a handful of other diseases. These include renal failure, kidney failure, abdominal pain, diarrhea, nausea etc.

    Bromate also affects the nutritional quality of bread, by degrading the vitamins and essential fatty acid contents of the flour.

    In other words, bread improved with bromate offers close to no nutrition to its consumer.

    Therefore, considering the high amount of bread consumed on a daily basis in Nigeria, there is high dietary exposure to bromate, and, hence, a high risk of cancer and other fatal ailments.

    Only one of 30 loaves survived bromated test

    Sometime in August 2018, a research was conducted by A.S Naze of the Department of Chemistry, Ignatius Ajuru University of Education, Port-Harcourt, to test for potassium bromate in bread sold across the city of Port-Harcourt, the capital of Rivers State.

    30 different brands of bread were obtained altogether – 15 each from Port-Harcourt North and Port-Harcourt South.

    At the end of the research, result revealed that all the 30 bread samples analysed, save one, contained bromate in high quantities, well above levels safe for human consumption.

    Earlier in July, another research had been carried out by one Nosa Omorodion of the Department of Health Service, University of Benin in Enugu, wherein 15 bread samples of different brands were collected across the state.

    But unlike the case in Port-Harcourt, all 15 bread samples analysed contained bromate in heavy quantities.

    The scenario was the same in Katsina in 2013, when Shuaibu Lawal of Katsina State College of Health Sciences carried out a test on 20 bread samples. None of the 20 bread samples examined was bromated-free.

    Scientists also carried out similar researches in Gwagwalada, a town in the Federal Capital Territory, and Nassarawa State. Sadly, no bromate-free bread was found.

    Rather, “the result showed that the locations have bakeries that use bromate content higher than the permissible limit,” Naze revealed.

    Ignorant bakers

    Findings have also shown that some of the bakers are ignorant of the constituents of ingredients they use in baking. For instance, when asked if he knew the improver he uses could contain bromate, which may be causing cancer in his customers, a baker at Mr. DBoss’s Bakery in Ogun State, simply replied, “It’s just like asking a cook what the content of Maggi is.”

    He expressed surprise at the information that there are different types of improvers, and claimed he did not know the constituents of his improver or whether it indeed contained bromate or not.

    To prove his point, he hurried inside and came out with a yellow sachet on which was an image of a chef, and a text which read “Betta Baker Bread Improver.”

    Handing it over to this reporter, Mr. D’Boss, popularly known by his bakery’s name said, “Go and analyse it yourself, take it to the lab, and see whether there is bromate in it. I only buy NAFDAC approved improver from the market; I don’t know whether it contains bromate or not.”

    D’Boss is just one of the many bakers, who have no idea what they feed their customers and are not committed to finding out— be it cancer, or other disease.

    How ‘NAFDAC approved’ bread may turn out bromated

    Since the ban on bromate from the baking industry, breads with labels bearing bold “BROMATE FREE” tag have flooded the market. Many of them carry a NAFDAC number, suggesting their approval by the agency. Yet, some of them have been confirmed to contain bromate during research analyses.

    This is because, according to A.O Emeje, a researcher, many bakers, in a bid to get approved by NAFDAC, bake a set of bread specially for presentation to NAFDAC for analysis. But after the approval, they backslide and return to their old ways.

    Findings revealed that compared to other bread improvers, potassium bromate is very cheap. So, bakers resort to its illegitimate use, despite government’s prohibition.

    A bromate seller in Lagos, Ojukwu, said bakers are some of his regular customers, followed by local morticians, who use the chemical for preserving dead bodies.

    NAFDAC gone to sleep?

    The question remains, how well has NAFDAC enforced the ban on bromated bread? How often does the body conduct random test on the hundreds of bread brands across the country?

    That may be difficult to say, considering the large number of bromated bread brands on the streets, as the afore-mentioned researches have confirmed.

    In 2015, the agency organised an on-the-spot bread test for various bakeries across the country, but that has remained the most noticeable of its efforts since the substance was prohibited in 2004.