Tag: Nigerian Newspapers

  • PDP will win Bayelsa by landslide, Dickson boasts

    BAYELSA State Governor, Seriake Dickson, has boasted that his party, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) would win the November 16 governorship poll in the state by landslide.

    The governor alleged that the inability of the APC to produce a validly-nominated candidate boosted the chances of the PDP at the forthcoming election.

    A statement signed on Wednesday by Dickson’s Chief Press Secretary, Fidelis Soriwei, said the governor spoke while inaugurating five new special advisers in Government House, Yenagoa.

    Dickson said no amount of propaganda, intimidation and financial inducement would stop majority of the people from voting for the PDP.

    He, however, said despite the traumatic post primary election crisis facing the main opposition in the state, his party would prepare very well for the coming poll.

    He said: “We are, preparing the ground to usher in the next administration, and make no mistake, the next administration is going to be a PDP-led administration in our state. Make no mistake, the Ijaw nation has no room for APC, this state is a PDP home.

    “We are the only party that has a validly-nominated candidate for the election. Mark my words validly nominated candidates, that’s what the law requires and the person must be qualified. As we speak, the other side, the APC, does not have a validly nominated candidate”.

    GDickson, who congratulated the new special advisers, described their appointments as a recognition of the important contributions they made in their previous assignments.

    He urged them to join other members of the Restoration Government to mobilize more support for right causes that would promote the continued stability, peace and development of the state.

    The Governor assured that more young people would be appointed into positions of trust in the coming days as part of efforts aimed at rewarding loyalty, dedication and hard work.

    Read Also: Bayelsa polls: Who succeeds Dickson?

    He said: “This swearing-in is just a tip of the iceberg. By tomorrow or next, more young people who have already been identified across the various local government areas and other stakeholders would be brought in as our way of broadening the base of our restoration government. It is also our way of identifying young people who needs to be given responsibility.

    “I implore You all to continue to do what you have been doing, mobilizing support and laying the foundation for a great and prosperous Bayelsa that we have all stood by the last 8 years. By tomorrow or before the end of the week a number of them that were identified will be brought in to be involved.”

    The special advisers are the former Chairman, Caretaker Committee of Sagbama Local Government Council, Michael Magbisa, and his Yenagoa counterpart, Austin Sambo.

    Others include the former Caretaker Committee Chairman of Kolokuma/Opokuma,Tolumoye Bikikoro,  Pius Andabai-Wareyai and  Ebilade Ekerefe.

     

  • Court grants N10m bail to ex-Petroleum Ministry director

    A HIGH Court of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) in Abuja on Wednesday admitted a former Director, Legal Services of the Ministry of Petroleum Resources, Mrs. Grace Taiga, to bail at N10 million, with two sureties, who must sign bonds of N10m each.

    Mrs. Taiga was arraigned before the court last Friday on an eight-count charge in which she was, among others, accused of  receiving bribe, through her offshore bank account in signing the Gas Supply Processing Agreement (GSPA) between P&ID Limited and the Federal Government of Nigeria, through the Petroleum Resources Ministry on January 11, 2019, and over which an arbitration panel, which sat in London, awarded about $9.6billion damages against Nigeria.

    Justice Olukayode Adeniyi, in a ruling, also ordered that the sureties to be produced by the defendant must be resident in Abuja and should depose to affidavits of means before the court, adding that they must also be civil servants, not below directorate cadre

    Justice Adeniyi allowed Mrs. Taiga to keep her international passport, in view of her lawyer’s claim that she was battling ill-health, but ordered that she must first inform the court should there be need for her to travel outside the country.

    Lawyer to the defendant, Ola Olanipekun (SAN) had, while moving her bail application, noted that Mrs. Taiga suffers from chronic diabetes and high blood pressure among other ailments.

    Read Also: BREAKING: Court orders Sowore’s release

    The judge had, upon her arraignment on September 20, 2019 ordered that Mrs. Taiga be remanded in Suleja prison, Niger State pending the hearing of her bail application on September25, 2019. The application was heard and granted yesterday.

    Mrs. Taiga is also accused, in the charge filed by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) of violating various laws by entering into the GSPA without a prior approval by the Federal Executive Council and a certificate of no-objection to the contract from the Bureau of Public Enterprise.

    The charge is in relation to the controversial Gas Supply Processing Agreement (GSPA), in respect of which a British court upheld P&ID claim to the  $9.6bn damages awarded against Nigeria by an arbitration tribunal

    The EFCC alleged that Mrs. Taiga  signed as Nigeria’s witness to the GSPA while the then Minister who was the head of the Ministry, Rilwan Lukman (now late), signed as Nigeria’s representative.

     

  • Buratai deplores importation of military hardware

    The Chief of Army Staff (COAS), Lt.-Gen. Buratai Tukur, has said the operational efficiency of the Army is hampered by its dependence on importation of military hardware and defence logistics.

    Tukur, who made the remark while showcasing locally manufactured military hardware during a Special Army Day celebration at the Abuja International Trade Fair ground, said the dependence on imported defence logistics to combat security challenges also drains the country’s foreign reserve.

    “There is urgent need to sustain the investment in research and development (R&D) on military hardware to reduce overdependence on importation of logistics to shore up and sustain the capabilities towards mitigating contemporary security challenges.

    “It is worthy to note that most of the requisite materials are imported, which not only drains our foreign reserve but impacts negatively on the operational efficiency of the Nigerian Army due to their lead time.

    “Today, we are all aware of the nature of security challenges facing our dear country and the resultant employment of the elements of national power by the Federal Government to contain them. The complex nature of the security environment has resulted in the deployment of the military virtually in all the 36 states of the federation.

    “It is, however, heart-warming that the military along with other security agencies have substantially restored law and order to the crisis affected areas.”

    Read Also: Don’t glorify terrorists, treat them as criminals, Buratai warns

    The successes of the Nigerian Army, in particular, are based on quality manpower development, capacity building, provision of adequate platforms and other essential materials to boost its operational capacity.”

    Buratai explained that in its resolve to check the trend, “the Nigeria Army, therefore, directed the Command Engineering Depot to collaborate with the Defence Industries Corporation of Nigeria (DICON) in research and development and equally funded their innovative ideas to produce a number of products displayed today”.

    This, he said, “lays a solid foundation for future consolidation of local production of military hardware and it will reduce the overdependence on the importation of defence logistics”.

    He added: “The sustenance of local capacity for production of both lethal and non-lethal military hardware rests solidly on quality manpower. Consequently, the Nigerian Army has established Nigerian Army University in Biu and continually sponsored officers and soldiers on post-graduate studies on robotics and automobile and software engineering.”

    The special guest of honour and Minister of Technology, Dr. Ogbonnaya Onu, lauded the ingenuity of Nigerian Army.

    He said the innovation showed that there is hope for the nation to achieve greatness.

  • African free trade stumbles with Nigerian blockade of Benin

    THE Lagos Chamber of Commerce, Benin Republic, Niger Republic and Ghana are feeling the heat of Nigeria’s border closure with neighbouring countries.

    The border restrictions came after Nigeria and Benin agreed in July to join the African Continental Free Trade Area, which targets greater economic integration through the removal of trade barriers and tariffs on 90 per cent of commodities. The duty-free movement of goods is expected to boost trade in the market of 1.2 billion people, similar in size to India, and a combined gross domestic product of $2.5 trillion.

    But, Nigeria has limited the entry of cargo from its borders with Benin

    “Over 80 per cent of West African cross-border trade is by road,” said Muda Yusuf, the head of the Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industries (LCCI). He added: “The cost is quite enormous and the closure is not sustainable”.

    The impact of the dispute is being felt as far as Ghana, which is separated from Nigeria by Benin and Togo. Manufacturers have complained about the impact on costs, John Defor, research director at the Association of Ghana Industries, said on telephone. Units of multinational companies including  Unilever NV, are in talks with the Federal Government to find a solution.

    Traders and smugglers in Benin have taken advantage of Nigeria’s protectionist policies to import and re-export goods to their bigger neighbour, said Ahmadou Aly Mbaye, an economics professor at Cheikh Anta Diop University in Senegal’s capital, Dakar.

    Read Also: Further thoughts on border closure

    Rice is a good example. Benin, with a population of 11 million that is barely five per cent of the Nigerian population is the biggest buyer of the grain from Thailand, the world’s second-largest exporter. Official shipments from Thailand to Nigeria have dwindled to almost nothing from more than 1.2 million tons in 2014, while those to Benin have increased by more than half.

    “Benin is basically importing for Nigeria,” Mbaye, who is a senior fellow at the Washington D.C.-based Brookings Institution, said: “Protectionism is difficult to implement in a globalized world, because people find ways around it,” he added.

    Buhari defended the blockade at a meeting in Japan with Beninese President Patrice Talon at the end of last month. He said Benin and its northern neighbor, Niger, should take “strict and comprehensive measures” to curtail smuggling across their borders.

    While Nigeria is committed to the African free-trade deal, the agreement “must not only promote free trade, but legal trade of quality made-in-Africa goods,” Buhari said in a Sept. 20 speech.

     

  • NBC fines 20 stations in second quarter of 2019

    Twenty stations violated the nation’s broadcasting codes in the second quarter of 2019, the National Broadcasting Commission (NBC) has said.

    The stations were fined for breaching the provisions of the broadcasting code on hate speech.

    A breakdown of the offences, which were allegedly committed between April and June, according to NBC’s Director General Is’haq Modibbo Kawu, include breaching broadcasting code on hate speech, use of vulgar lyrics and obscene content.

    Kawu berated African Independent Television (AIT) for defying all actions to ensure compliance with the Nigeria Broadcasting Code.

    Sections of the breached codes are: Section 1.16.1(f): The law of contempt, relating to matter pending before law court’s, and Section 5.1.12: News and current affairs programme shall be guided by the ethical standards of journalism.

    Kaduna Zone recorded the highest in obscenity, while Abuja Zone topped the chart in hate speech.

    In the area of unverified claims, the Ibadan Zone recorded the highest.

    On fines meted out to the errant stations, Abuja Zone recorded the highest with 47.17 per cent, Ibadan Zone came second with 15.09 per cent and Benin came third with 13.22 per cent while the lowest was Enugu Zone with 1.89 per cent.

    Forty-five stations were fined in the first quarter of the year for similar offences.

    Addressing reporters on the second quarter monitoring of broadcast stations’ profile, Kawu said: “Coming shortly after the National and State Elections in the first quarter of the year, the report indicates that though there is a drop in breaches related to hateful, abusive and inflammatory broadcast, which peaked during the elections, and for which as many as 45 stations were fined, the second quarter indicates that the trend has continued among certain stations, especially in political programmes.

    “Therefore, 20 stations were fined in the second quarter for breaching provisions of the Nigeria Broadcasting Code on hate speech.

    “Other breaches were in the area of Obscene and Vulgar Lyrics – 10 stations were fined for infractions related to use of vulgar lyrics and obscene content. It is worth mentioning that the programme, Big Brother Naija (BBN4) was cautioned against unwholesome content on its broadcast.

    “Use of unsubstantiated and misleading claims by advertisers, especially trado-medic advertising, also dropped significantly from the last quarter, but a total of 30 stations were fined for infractions related to same.

    “Ten broadcast stations were fined for breaches related to station announcers turning themselves into advertisers, hypers and promoters of products.”

    On AIT, Kawu said: “Our monitoring activities indicate that some stations, especially AIT, are deliberately meddling in the cases before the election tribunal. It is trite knowledge that the media cannot comment on or discuss the details of any matter in court. The Broadcast Code in Section 1.16.1(f) requires all broadcasters to comply with the law of contempt relating to matters pending before the law courts.”

  • Radiotherapy outside Nigeria unnecessary, says NHA’s CMD

    The Chief Medical Director (CMD) of the National Hospital Abuja (NHA), Dr. J. A. F. Momoh, has said it is a waste of resources and unnecessary venture for Nigerians to embark on medical tourism for radiotherapy in the treatment of cancer.

    The NHA is the only government hospital in West Africa with two radiotherapy equipment that are functional at the same time; the second is the Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH).

    Momoh addressed reporters ahead of the 20th anniversary of the NHA with the theme: The Past, the Present and the Future.

    He said: “If you are going for radiotherapy outside the country, I can really say it is no longer necessary.

    “We installed our equipment two years ago and since then the equipment has been functional non-stop. It only had to be shut down for three days for routine maintenance.

    “The advantage of getting treatment at the National Hospital is that there will be no time when we say we cannot treat a patient because equipment has broken down. We can easily shut down one for routine maintenance while the other is working.

    “The second equipment was donated by Shell Nigeria Exploration and Production Company (SNEPCO) in collaboration with the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC).”

    The CMD explained why he recommended that anyone in need of radiotherapy should not engage in medical tourism.

    Read Also: Treatment of cancer like HIV and AIDS should be free

    “When people were going abroad, they had to spend up to $10,000 for treatment. Whereas in National Hospital, we are charging less than 10 per cent of that amount.

    “Even for the indigent patients, there is a programme for the consideration of treatment, either at subsidised or a totally waved rate,” he said.

    Momoh stressed the need for the public to be aware that cancer treatment is not only about the availability of equipment but involves early screening and diagnosis so that chemotherapy and surgery can be done, where necessary.

    “The cost of treatment here for radiotherapy is greatly subsidised by the Federal Government. The equipment has been installed, commissioned, and licensed for treatment, and we are treating patients on this,” he said.

    The NHA Board Chairman Mrs Patricia Etteh lauded the efforts of the Federal Government and its Ministry of Health for supporting the hospital.

    The former House of Representatives Speaker urged them to put more funding to address the old challenges, such as dilapidated infrastructure and biomedical equipment.

    “The Federal Government has made effective healthcare delivery to all Nigerians its cardinal goal and all efforts are being put in place to ensure that medical tourism is minimised,” she said.

  • Contraception: Elixir for economic, social development

    This year’s World Contraception Day, observed today, is designed to encourage young people to make informed choices on their sexual and reproductive health and to enhance family planning, write MICHAEL AJAYI and VIVIAN IHECHU.

     

    “IT’s your life, it’s your responsibility’’ is the theme for this year’s World Contraception Day, aimed at promoting global health and welfare.

    World Contraception Day is an annual event commemorated to improve awareness of all contraceptive methods available.

    It is designed to encourage young people to make informed choices on their sexual and reproductive health.

    This year’s celebration focuses on young people.

    The World Health Organisation (WHO) maintains that family planning (FP) allows individuals and couples to anticipate and attain their desired number of children and the spacing and timing of their births.

    It is achieved through use of contraceptives and the treatment of involuntary infertility.

    Experts have also harped on the need for increased awareness and funding for FP.

    They said it is key to improving economic indices, achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and harnessing the demographic dividends.

    According to former Executive Director of the United Nations Population Fund (UNFA), the late Dr. Babatunde Osotimehin, access to family planning is so important and a universal marker that affects all spheres of living.

    “The availability of family planning affects education prospects and human capital among adolescent girls by preventing teenage pregnancies and enabling girls to stay in school.

    “Access to modern contraception reduces the risks of maternal and newborn deaths as well as reducing lifetime parity, and thus, it affects health, life expectancy and the dependency ratio.

    “It could also improve access to food and reduce hunger by reducing the dependency ratio.

    “Urbanisation and population dynamics are intrinsically linked, particularly internal and external migration, which have poverty as a root cause.

    “Access to modern contraception can spur the economy, protect the environment and contribute to overall poverty reduction,’’ he had said.

    According to Mr. Ayo Adebusoye, Chairman, Public Health Sustainable Advocacy Initiative (PHSAI), family planning is now looked at as an investment.

    Adebusoye said this is because there was the issue of the demographic dividend, which is basically the economic growth that comes when there is a particular transition in the demography.

    “Demography has to do with the age component of the population, where you have enough percentage of the population who are actually working, and that can maintain the dependence for the youthful population of below 15.

    “But when you have too much of the youth budge, then you see that there’s lot of dependence; and once that dependency ratio is there, we actually see that a country is susceptible to political instability.

    “The country is susceptible to poverty, and of course, a lot of the health indices are on the negative, just as we are experiencing in Nigeria.

    “This is because of the uncontrolled and unplanned population we are witnessing.

    “We are seeing increasing trends, increasing poverty level, increased child and maternal mortality; these are increasing at a very phenomenal rate.’’

    Adebusoye said 100 years ago, according to British Trade Statistics 1919 that Lord Lugard made available, we were about 17.5 million in Nigeria.

    “Now, we’re looking at 100 years later, about 200 million; that’s like 10 times of the population; imagine if we continue at that pace, by the end of another 100 years we would be over a billion or two billion.

    “When we consider that the whole world now is only seven billion, what does that say? Already we are seeing the implications,’’ he said.

    An increase in human population without the necessary cares, employment, basic amenities and stretched finances result in many negative indices, Adebusoye pointed out.

    “We are seeing the rise in human trafficking.

    “In Nigeria, you see our young ones, which was never the case, trying to cross the Sahara Desert and dying there.

    “Every day we hear of youths dying in the Mediterranean Sea, trying to cross over to Europe escaping, so to speak, because there is no plan for them.

    “We need to identify this emergency situation and tackle it through FP by reducing the number of children that we and the society can cater for.’’

    On its impact on health, especially maternal mortality, he said contraception and FP avert thousands of unwanted pregnancies, premature mothers’ death and infants who die prematurely resulting from lack of care.

    “A lot of studies done all over the world show that a mother who does not plan for her pregnancy is more susceptible to casualty of serious diseases and ultimately, dying because of no care.

    “Similarly, those infants who don’t have any care, they are more liable to be susceptible to early childhood morbidity and mortality.

    “So, when you calculate all the costs of trying to take care of the health care needs of those unwanted situations, you see that contraception and FP are one very direct way.’’

    Adebusoye further said that some countries have almost zero per cent maternal mortality.

    “That means that nobody is dying because she is trying to give birth, having children is not a disease but here we are very prayerful, and we are always very thankful when the mother survives childbirth.

    “So, we actually need to reduce the costs of mothers and children dying just because of no planning.

    “Hence, we need policymakers to listen to these cries for the implementation of family planning policies which are already in place.

    “There is also the need for increased investment in FP as just one dollar investment in family planning can give over 12 times the cost savings through taking care of the child and the mother during delivery and post-delivery care,’’ Adebusoye said.

     

    The benefits

     

    Mrs. Adekoya Abiola, a retired nurse, said family planning allows women to make informed choices about reproductive health, thereby promoting quality of life for the family, children, community and the country.

    Abiola, a member of PHSAI, spoke on the sidelines of a Media Dialogue on Family Planning in Lagos. She said there were different methods of family planning.

    The media dialogue was organised by Pathfinder International Nigeria.

    On the methods of contraception and FP, Abiola said there were the temporary and permanent methods.

    “In the temporary, we have long active and short active; the long active ones include implants which can last between three and five years and the IntraUterine Contraceptive Device (IUCD) which can last for five to 12 years.

    “For the short active method, we have the injectable which range between one and three months, oral contraceptives and close barrier method which include the male and female condoms.

    “For the permanent method, there are the tubal ligation in women and vasectomy.’’

    The family planning expert reiterated that family planning was very effective, affordable and safe for men and women, even for the youth and adolescent.

    However, she advised that before administering any family planning method, a provider must be knowledgeable to provide different options for either the adolescent or married couples, to give correct and accurate information.

    This is so that those who want to make choices would be able to make informed ones.

    “They must be competence to deliver all the methods for people to make choices.

    “When this is taken seriously, the issue of unplanned or unwanted pregnancy will cease to exist and unsafe abortion, which may lead to sepsis, septicemia and death.

    She advocated for people to be sensitised and mobilised for the issue of ignorance, lack of information and misconception to be eradicated.

    Lending voice for increased efforts on FP and barriers to access to be broken, the State Team Leader of the Nigerian Urban Reproductive Health Initiative (NURHI) in Lagos, Dr. Omasanjuwa Edun, called for barriers to young people being able to access quality family planning services to be addressed.

    He condemned the attitude of providers and their bias against young people.

    “The providers need to be aware that for young people, access to quality contraceptives or life planning information and services is not just about being sexually active or abstaining or promiscuity but about reaching their maximum life potential and adding value to the society.

    “To achieve this, Adolescents and Youth Sexual and Reproductive Health services need to be integrated into all primary health care services and provider bias addressed by constantly reminding providers to be youth-friendly through different mediums.

    “Family planning promotes the health and welfare of the entire family and in turn the whole community and nation.

    “It allows the woman to rest between pregnancies in order to regain her health and strength and enable her to have a healthy child and thereby reducing the incidence of maternal mortality in Nigeria.

    “Family Planning will allow us to take bold leaps, better life and secured future for all,’’ Edun said.

    In conclusion, the family planning experts stressed the need for strategies to implement policies on FP, increased funding and access as well as create more awareness on FP usage and benefits.

    This is because it is an important key to unlocking sustainable development goals.

    Also, it has a long term benefit of breaking the cycle of poverty among families which transcends generations with ripple effects across the new global development agenda.

     

    • Ajayi and Ihechu write for News Agency of Nigeria (NAN)
  • Gates Foundation report hails Nigeria for improved immunisation

    The 2019 Goalkeeper Report of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation (BMGF) has praised states in the Northwest for improvement in routine immunisation.

    According to the report, which has sub-themes on climate adaption, gender inequality, digital inclusion and data exploration of countries all over the world, Sokoto, Kaduna, Zamfara and Kebbi states were specifically praised for improvement in their routine immunisation.

    Health Advocates, under the aegis of Partnership for Advocacy in Child and Family Health at Scale (PACFaH@Scale) project, reviewed the report and said it was done to draw lessons for Nigeria.

    The group noted that although the aim was on reporting successes and challenges in the report, they were focused on the implications of the healthcare delivery section of the report for Nigeria.

    Addressing reporters yesterday in Abuja, where they issued a communique on the report review, members of the group said the challenge of healthcare delivery was of direct focus for the PACFaH@Scale project, funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.

    Project Chairman Nura Faggo said: “If you go through the report, there is a paragraph under routine immunisation where the North Western states of Sokoto, Kaduna, Zamfara and Kebbi axis were commended for improvement in routine immunisation. But note that the primary health care delivery is the cornerstone of healthcare the world over.

    Read Also: Gates foundation honours 16-year-old activist who refused child marriage

    “So, you cannot say that the fact that Nigeria is putting structures in place to make it better, that it is enough. We are still asking for more because if the primary health care system is okay, the secondary and tertiary health care system will have less burdens.

    “We acknowledge the progress, the implementation of the universal health coverage and approval of the basic health care provision fund, which is in the 2019 budget and will be made a statutory allocation by next year, where one per cent of the federation’s collection is set aside for the fund for states to access is quite commendable for the Nigerian government and shows that we are aligning ourselves with the sustainable development goals.”

    Reading the communique, he added: “The challenge of healthcare delivery is of direct focus for the PACFaH@Scale project, funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.

    “As the Federal Government of Nigeria prepares to submit the 2020 annual budget, it behoves us to use this medium to draw the attention of government to the opportunity of strengthening healthcare delivery through the mechanism of Universal Health Coverage (UHC) within the framework of Primary Healthcare Under One Roof (PHCUOR) policy.

    “We, therefore, call on Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs) at national and state levels to expanded universal health coverage within national and state adopted Primary Healthcare under one roof policies…”

  • Gates exposed me to challenges in our health system, says Dangote

    The Chairman of Dangote Group of Industries, Alhaji Aliko Dangote, has said he did not know the level of neglect in Nigeria’s Health sector until he had a conversation with American billionaire, Mr Bill Gates.

    Dangote spoke yesterday in New York at this year’s goalkeepers meeting of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.

    He recalled that after his conversion with Mr Gates, he became more interested in doing something to improve children’s access to nutritional food and healthcare system in the country.

    Dangote said his work through his foundation had helped to shape policy around nutrition in Nigeria.

    For example, the Federal Government now has a policy on food fortification, making it compulsory for producers of certain products, such as rice, sugar, wheat, spaghetti and noodles, to include vitamin supplements in their products.

    “When I started my foundation in 1994, I never realised we had this massive challenge in the Health sector.

    “Really, it was mind-boggling when we had this agreement to collaborate with the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and that really opened my eyes to realise that there are a lot of challenges in health.

    Read Also: UN Sec-Gen appoints Dangote, Adesina, 25 others to fight global malnutrition

    “At that time, I didn’t have the opportunity of meeting Bill, but meeting him changed me into a different person.

    “This is somebody who has nothing to do with us in Africa or Nigeria, but he is putting his money and his soul into everything.

    “He is very committed to helping humanity and that really surprises me a lot. I realised that he is a simple person; I never knew Bill would be this simple. He is a very soft-spoken guy and kind-hearted. It is very difficult to find people like Bill in this world. My only prayer is that in the next few years, I will try and give my chunk of wealth to charity too,” he said.

    Also, the Co-founder of Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, Mr Bill Gates, said he would not have had the kind of relationship he currently has in Africa without Dangote.

    He hailed Dangote for helping children overcome malnutrition in Nigeria through food fortification.

    The American said balanced diet is important because a child’s ultimate survival after the age of five depends on the nutrition he or she gets.

    Gates also thanked Dangote for being a true friend and teaching him how to communicate with people.

  • Tinubu distributes books to three schools

    The President of Fatima Charity Foundation (FCF) Chief Bintu Fatima Tinubu has distributed exercise books to pupils in three schools.

    The schools are Lagos Island East Montessori Nursery and Primary School, Lagos Island, Ladipo Primary School, Sari-Iganmu and Ikosi Primary School, Ikosi-Isheri.

    Chief Tinubu, who is the Iyalode of Lagos, said the gesture was to complement the effort of the state government in education.

    “We decided that there is a lot to be done by the Lagos State government and they cannot do it alone. We decided to help the children to make their study easier,” she said.

    The Iyalode of Lagos said the Chairman of Lagos Island East Local Council Development Area (LCDA) Comrade Kamal Salau-Bashua did a great job by building a modern school capable of competing with private schools.

    Nigeria, she said, will gain more if all school-age children are enrolled in school.

    Read Also: Tribunal victory: Tinubu congratulates Ogun governor

    She urged the youth to shun cultism and other criminal activities.

    “Be determined to succeed and work towards achieving that success. You don’t need the government to get yourself to succeed, it’s what you do to yourself – your determination, energy, focus, that will make the world a better place for you,” she said.

    Comrade Salau-Bashua hailed Chief Tinubu for coming to the aid of the schools.

    He described private sector partnership with government as perfect, urging other non-governmental organisations to emulate the foundation.

    “We don’t expect our youths to be on the streets while their peers are in the classrooms. They should seize the opportunity of learning under a condusive atmosphere we are creating and make a good future for themselves,” he said.