Tag: Nigeria newspaper

  • Adamawa to support passage of gender, equal opportunities bill

    Adamawa to support passage of gender, equal opportunities bill

    Adamawa Government is to support passage and implementation of Gender and Equal Opportunities ( GEO ) Bill before the State Assembly.

    The government position was contained in a communique issued at the end of a two-day conference organised by the state Ministry of Women Affairs in collaboration with UN Women on Tuesday in Yola.

    The conference attended by stakeholders including commissioners and permanent secretaries also resolved to support all processes that would ensure gender mainstreaming and inclusion for equity and justice in roles play by men and women in livelihood and peace building.

    “The Conference in session resolved that Adamawa government will support the passage of GEO bill by the House of Assembly and also ensure faithful implementation if so passed;

    “The Conference in session equally resolved to promote the active engagement of women and youth in peace building processes;

    “The conference in session condemns all forms of violence against all persons, especially violence against women, girls, children and all vulnerable persons.”

    UN Women had been involved in promoting women’s engagement in peace and security in northern Nigeria.

    NAN

  • Everton must prepare to win ugly, Sigurdsson says

    Everton must prepare to win ugly, Sigurdsson says

    Everton Football Club must be prepared to win anyway possible to lift their spirits and turn their English Premier League season around, Iceland international Gylfi Sigurdsson has said.

    Everton needed a late penalty kick from Wayne Rooney to salvage a 1-1 draw against Brighton and Hove Albion on Sunday and are 16th on the table with eight points.

    Sigurdsson said they were not far away from getting better results with this.

    “Obviously the next game is an important one but, for us at the moment, we just need to win, pretty or ugly,” the midfielder told the club’s website (www.evertonfc.com) ahead of their Europa League game against France’s Lyon on Thursday.

    “We just need to get results and once we do that, the confidence will come back into the team and things will come a little bit easier for us.

    “And I think if we get a couple of results back-to-back, then we’ll hopefully get going. I don’t think we’re too far away.”

    Everton are bottom of Group E after a 3-0 loss to Italian group leaders Atalanta and a 2-2 draw with Cypriot side Apollon Limassol.

    Lyon are a spot above Everton after two draws.

    “It’s a strange group. I think everyone can beat anyone,” Sigurdsson said.

    “There are some good teams in there. You may need at least 10 points to go through and it will be nice to start (building towards) that on Thursday against a tough team.

    “The boys and the staff are determined to work hard to turn this around because we’ve got good players. Personally and with all of the players collectively, we’re just off our best.

    “But they are small margins in football and I don’t think we’re a mile off getting results, and a couple of scruffy wins, 1-0 away or whatever it is, that pumps a little bit of confidence into the team and that’s sometimes what you need.”

    NAN

  • LASUTH to commence full cardiac surgery – CMD

    LASUTH to commence full cardiac surgery – CMD

    As part of efforts to stem overseas medical tourism by Nigerians, the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital ( LASUTH ), Ikeja, says it will soon begin full cardiac surgery.

    The Chief Medical Director ( CMD ), Prof. Adewole Oke, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Tuesday in Lagos that the teaching hospital was striving to be the hub of qualitative healthcare delivery in Nigeria.

    Lagos State University Teaching Hospital ( LASUTH ) doctors performing surgery.

    Oke said the hospital was making effort to end the treatment of diseases that could be treated locally; hence, there it was ready to do its best.

    “We have a government that is interested in the health sector; that is ready to move the sector forward. It has provided enough infrastructure and world class facilities.

    “In other to complement the government’s efforts, we are also sharpening our skills to make sure that we provide world class services to make Lagos the hub of medical healthcare delivery.

    “Not by the world of the mouth, LASUTH conducted five kidney transplants this week and two between yesterday and today without any expatriate. All the surgeons are LASUTH doctors.

    “We have also done cardiac surgery (heart replacement) about six months ago with the aid of some foreign consultants, but soon we will stand on our own,’’ he said.

    Oke said that with the world class facilities available in the teaching hospital, it was set to stand without any assistance from overseas as regards surgery.

    “As it stands today, we can boast of first class infrastructure, hence, we can also provide first class services in terms of healthcare for Lagosians and Nigeria as whole.

    “We hope to build on our kidney transplant experience for the cardiac. We have had seamless cardiac surgery first, but we want to cross our Ts and dot our Is on it.

    “By next year, we should be able to stand on our own and perform the surgery locally without external help which I believe will help our system to grow.

    “The doctors available at the hospital are up to the task, they are well equipped and trained with first class knowledge,’’ he said.

    NAN

  • Liverpool’s Lallana could return in November – Klopp

    Liverpool’s Lallana could return in November – Klopp

    Liverpool midfielder Adam Lallana could return from a thigh injury after the conclusion of the next international break early November, the English Premier League club’s manager Juergen Klopp has said.

    Lallana, who joined Liverpool from Southampton in July 2014, last played during the team’s pre-season loss to Atletico Madrid in August.

    The Merseyside club said the 29-year-old had returned to their training ground on Monday to continue his recovery.

    “It’s absolutely good news. I cannot say now, but maybe after the next international break he could be back,” Klopp told the club website (www.liverpoolfc.com).

    “It would be fantastic for us, of course. Everybody knows what kind of a quality player he is.”

    Liverpool are eighth in the league and travel to Slovenia to face NK Maribor in the Champions League later on Tuesday.

    NAN

  • Commuters groan as gridlock worsens on Lagos-Abeokuta road

    Commuters groan as gridlock worsens on Lagos-Abeokuta road

    Motorists plying the Lagos-Abeokuta Expressway and other road users on Tuesday called for measures to reduce the hardship from gridlock caused by the ongoing Oshodi-Abule Egba Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) lane construction.

    The road users experience traffic congestion on various portions during peak periods from Sango, Iyana Ipaja, Egbeda and other areas as they merge onto the highway.

    The commuters expressed worries over the reduction of the expressway from five to two lanes which compounded gridlock on the axis and the consequent man-hour loss.

    They also lamented the increase in transport fares due to relocation of some transporters to other axis with less traffic congestion.

    That the situation had made life unbearable for road users on a daily basis and that the congestion was mostly experienced during peak hours, especially where access roads merged.

    Between Abule-Egba and Iyana Ipaja, the gridlock gets chaotic as vehicles from Sango, Ijaye and others heading toward Oshodi struggle to enter the narrowed lanes.

    The congestion becomes confounded around the Alimosho Road as traffic from Egbeda, Dopemu, Ikotun, Ijegun and other areas struggle to enter the highway. The gridlock returns to the Sango Ota bound carriageway when workers close from work.

    A civil servant who lives in Egbeda, Mr Enejo Sunday, appealed to the Lagos State Government to speed up the construction and repair the bad portions of the highway to reduce gridlock.

    “In the past, the trip from Egbeda to Alausa does not take more than 10 minutes but these days it takes hours. I am even afraid to take my car out now because of the bad road and gridlock.

    “The government should please repair the narrow road they have left for us because the stress on this road is killing us gradually,’’ he said.

    A commercial bus driver, Mr Abdulrafiu Mohammed, who plies the Iyana Ipaja-Oshodi route, appealed to the government to speed up the project affecting transport business on the axis.

    “People accuse us of hiking fares but we have to do that because we burn more fuel when there is go slow.

    “It is only the government that can solve the problem, they know what to do,’’ he said.

    Prince Adeyinka Ademuyiwa, an estate agent in Ikeja, said that the road was going to bring joy to the axis soon as according to him, it is good and everyone will be accommodated.

    “For now the traffic is not the best but after they would have finished, everybody will enjoy,’’ he said.

    However, Mr Gbenga Akinlolu, an engineer in Egbeda, urged the state government to create more access routes to reduce hardship on the road.

    Akinlolu said that government was supposed to have factored in the project, the cost of expansion of the highway as according to him, one of the existing two lanes left for road users is a layby.

    He said that the construction and constant potholes on various portion on the highway was causing traffic snarl around Alaguntan bus stop area which recorded easy passage for vehicles in the past.

    “The government is after the interest of making money through the BRT buses and they are not concerned about us the road users.

    “This is an inter-state road and they reduced it to only one lane because the outer lane serves as layby for commercial buses and other vehicles to park, it does not make sense at all,’’ he said.

    Mrs Aduke Stephen, a business woman in Idumota Market, Lagos Island, called for continuous road maintenance to ease the hardship.

    “Transporters charge outrageous sums now because of this BRT construction but I don’t care because once the project is completed, their season of exploitation will be over forever.

    “The transporters change price like chameleon, for example, yesterday a bus charged my children N200 from Iyana Ipaja to Oshodi and because I missed that one, the next one collected N300,’’ she told NAN.

    Contributing, Mr Abiodun Dabiri, Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer of Lagos Metropolitan Area Transport Authority ( LAMATA ), the project’s supervising agency, said on telephone that measures were in place to reduce hardship.

    Dabiri said that the project was born out of the desire of the state government to tackle transportation deficit on the axis which cuts across four local governments.

    He, however, said that the high traffic on the axis was keeping the contractor on the project busy as they strive to speed up work on site.

    “It is a herculean task because the area is highly urbanised.

    “We have told the contractor to always fill potholes and repair the road shoulders to ensure the existing road is motorable to reduce gridlock,’’ he said.

    He explained that the contractor worked extensively daily on site on various portions between Abule Egba and Oshodi and debunked allegations that they sometimes abandoned work.

    He appealed to residents of Lagos and the road users to be patient as the construction progressed, noting that it was the prize to pay for development.

    Dabiri also appealed to residents to pay their taxes to help Gov. Akinwunmi Ambode to achieve his vision of ensuring even development across the state.

    A correspondent who took a trip on the highway on Tuesday reports that workmen were working on some pillars and the median barriers between Cement and Mangoro Bus stop areas.

    Also, some surveyors were seen on site around Ile Zik bus stop in Ikeja axis.

    NAN

  • ‘U.S. strike kills dozens ISIS members’

    ‘U.S. strike kills dozens ISIS members’

    U.S. forces killed dozens of Islamic State in Iraq and Syria ( ISIS’ ) members in a strike on two ISIS training camps on Monday in Al Bayda Governorate, Yemen, Pentagon has said.

    The U.S. Department of Defense, in a statement, said the strike disrupted the terrorist organisation’s attempts to train new fighters.

    “ISIS used the camps to train militants to conduct terror attacks using AK-47s, machine guns, rocket-propelled grenade launchers and endurance training.

    “ISIS has used the ungoverned spaces of Yemen to plot, direct, instigate, resource and recruit for attacks against America and its allies around the world.

    “For years, Yemen has been a hub for terrorist recruiting, training and transit,” Pentagon said.

    In coordination with the Government of Yemen, U.S. forces are supporting ongoing counterterrorism operations in Yemen against ISIS and Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula.

    “This is to degrade the groups’ ability to coordinate external terror attacks and limit their ability to hold territory seized from the legitimate government of Yemen.

    “Strikes against ISIS targets disrupt and destroy militants’ attack-plotting efforts, leadership networks, and freedom of manoeuvre within the region,” Pentagon said.

    NAN

  • ‘Ogun paid N4bn compensation in 6 years’

    ‘Ogun paid N4bn compensation in 6 years’

    The Ogun Government on Monday said that it paid over N4 billion compensation the last six years to property owners whose structures were demolished for ongoing road construction.

    Mr Olamilekan Adegbite, the state Commissioner for Works and Infrastructure, disclosed this on Monday during an oversight visit by the State Assembly Committee on Works and Infrastructure to the ministry in Abeokuta.

    Adegbite said that the ministry needed additional N4 billion to complete the payment, saying that efforts were in top gear to pay other property owners yet to be compensated.

    He said that the ministry spent over N11 billion on road construction in all parts of the state between January and August.

    The commissioner said that over N2.9 billion was spent on road rehabilitation with a view to opening up the state for industrialisation and improving the socioeconomic activities in the state.

    According to him, N157.7million was generated as revenue during the period under review and government would soon commence the construction of the rural roads.

    “The state government had advertised recently to increase the standard of living of rural dwellers, thereby reducing rural-urban drift,’’ he said.

    The commissioner said that work had commenced on Agbara-Atan-Lusada road, adding that plans were underway to reconstruct Owode-Ilaro road to boost socio-economic activities in the area.

    Adegbite, who underscored the essence of flyovers in some parts of the state, explained that such structures became necessary to ease traffic congestion and carnage on roads as well as enhance smooth traffic flow.

    Responding, the Committee Chairman, Mr Olayiwola Ojodu, commended the quality of work done by contractors under the supervision of the ministry.

    Ojodu advised the ministry and contractors handling various projects to speed up the pace of work on all construction sites in the state.

    The committee also assessed the budget performance of the State Road Maintenance Agency (OGROMA) and Bureau of Electrical Engineering Services and advised them on improved service delivery.

  • Kebbi suspends immunisation exercise due to lack of pens

    Kebbi suspends immunisation exercise due to lack of pens

    The Kebbi State Government on Monday suspended the polio immunisation exercise meant to commence across the 225 wards of its 21 local government areas due to lack of marker pens.

    The National Polio Immunisation ( NPI ) Manager for Birnin-Kebbi Local Government, Alhaji Bello Umar, confirmed the suspension in an interview with newsmen after the flag-off of the exercise at the Deputy Governor’s residence in Kebbi.

    Umar said that the commencement of the exercise had been shifted to Thursday, Oct. 19.

    “We are likely to receive the marker pens probably by Tuesday.

    “If it comes, we will commence the distribution of the vaccines on Wednesday while immunization proper will kick-off on Thursday this week.

    “However, all necessary materials to embark on the polio immunisation exercise are on ground, it is only the maker pens that are not available.”

    The Commissioner of Health, Alhaji Umar Kambaza, who also confirmed the suspension of the exercise, said that the markers would be available soon.

    He said that the exercise targeted one million children across the 225 wards in the state and would last for four days.

    Kambaza said: “after the flag-off, I conducted inquiries in some of the local governments in the state such as Aliero, Jega, Yauri, Birnin-Kebbi and Shanga.

    “They all confirmed that the polio immunisation exercise had been postponed to Thursday for the simple reason of lack of marker pens to identify any child who has been immunised’’.

    Earlier, the Deputy Governor, Col. Samaila Dabai (rtd), who flagged-off the exercise with his children, said the campaign was very important to the state government.

    According to him, this was to ensure that newborns to five years old children are immunised against polio.

    Dabai said the reason for the flagged-off at his residence was to enable him start the exercise with his children.

    The deputy governor said: “if polio immunisation is harmful I will not administer it on my blood children. So all the rumours about polio vaccine is not true’’.

    NAN

  • Academic staff, COEASU, go spiritual over unpaid salaries

    Academic staff, COEASU, go spiritual over unpaid salaries

    Members of the Academic Staff Union of the College of Education ( COEASU ), Ilorin said they had embarked on prayer and fasting to ensure payment of their outstanding salaries by the Kwara Government.

    The Chairman of the union, Saba Daniel, on Monday in Ilorin said they went spiritual because the state government was yet to address the issue.

    ”We are still waiting because the issue is yet to be addressed, so we have resorted to fasting and prayers.

    ”The suffering is too much for our members because most of us can no longer cater for our families or send our children to school.

    ”Non payment of salary is a silent killer, so we are pleading with the state government to meet our needs and settle us,” Daniel said.

    He, however, said that the decision to either call-off the strike or continue with it depended on members of the union.

    In his reaction, the Senior Special Assistant to the Governor on Media and Communications, Muideen Akorede, said the subvention for the college for the last quarter would soon be released.

    ”The issue is not about prayers, Gov. Abdulfatah Ahmed has pledged to settle all outstanding salary arrears to state-owned tertiary institutions in this last quarter, ” Akorede said

    NAN

  • England won’t win in Russia and must improve – Shearer

    England won’t win in Russia and must improve – Shearer

    England’s senior side is not yet of a standard to be a serious title contender at next year’s FIFA World Cup, former striker Alan Shearer says.

    Shearer said on Monday that in spite of its age-group teams dazzling on the global stage at various youth tournaments in 2017, England may not be favourites at Russia 2018.

    Gareth Southgate’s side went unbeaten in their qualifying campaign for Russia but has been criticised for lacking a creative spark.

    It has scored only 18 goals in 10 games in a group containing lowly-ranked Lithuania and Lithuania

    “I don’t expect us to win the World Cup in Russia next year, even with the success of our teams underneath that level, be it the under-21s, the under-19s or the under-17s,” Shearer said in an interview from Bengaluru.

    “I don’t see us going to Russia and winning the tournament. No.”

    England’s recent record at the quadrennial showpiece event has not been inspiring.

    The 1966 champions, who reached the quarter-finals in 2002 and 2006, exited at the round of 16 stage in the 2010 World Cup in South Africa.

    Their worst performance came at the last edition in Brazil when they failed to get past the group stage.

    The Euro 2016 exit at the round of 16 stage after defeat to Iceland left little optimism among England’s supporters.

    Shearer, who was in India for a Premier League fan park event where roughly 40,000 spectators watched the top matches of the weekend on a giant screen, thinks that will prove to be a nadir.

    “What I would expect is to see an improvement on what we saw in France in the European Championships 18 months ago,” said Shearer, who scored 30 goals in 63 appearances for England.

    “It shouldn’t be too difficult to improve on that when you consider the performance we had in the game against Iceland when we were knocked out of the tournament.

    “Very much similar to other campaigns when we had results in the qualifiers. We are there now but we have to go one step further and we have to show improvement.”

    In stark contrast to the national side, the England Under-20s won the World Cup in South Korea in June before their Under-19 team became European champions in Georgia the following month.

    The young Lions have also won the Toulon Tournament this year and are through to the last 16 of the ongoing Under-17 World Cup in India.

    Shearer, who scored twice in four appearances at the 1998 World Cup finals in France, suggested one of the reasons why England were unsuccessful at the top level.

    He said it was because young English players are not playing in the Premier League.

    “Part of the problem is lot of these boys in the league teams with England are not getting the chance to play at the club level,” Shearer said.

    “Clubs like Manchester City, Manchester United, Chelsea and Arsenal tend to spend big on foreign players who the managers or the clubs feel are pretty much guaranteed for success.
    “It’s difficult for these managers as they have to deliver success tomorrow.

    “To put in a young player, he needs time to settle and feel his way into the Premier League and clubs are not prepared to do that.”

    Shearer has, however, backed former team mate Southgate to succeed as the national team manager.

    “I am pleased that we were able to give an English player, an young English coach the opportunity to try and do it at that level,” Shearer said.

    “More often than not over the past years we have gone and spent big on foreign managers and they haven’t proved successful at all.

    “I am pleased we have given the job to an English guy who has played in tournaments.

    “I have played with Gareth in tournaments also, so he is aware what tournament football is about and what you need to try and do to get to the latter stages. Hopefully that will stand him in good stead.

    NAN