Tag: Nigerians

  • DG urges Nigerians on safety

    The Director-General of the Lagos State Safety Commission (LSSC), Mrs. Dominga Omolara Odebunmi, has urged Nigerians to be safety conscious.

    Mrs. Odebunmi, a Fellow of the Royal Society of Public Health, UK; Member, British Standard Institute (BSI-Global), Member, Institute of Food Science & Technology, UK (IFST) and Member, Institute of Occupational Health & Safety, UK (IOHS), said since it was established in July 2011, LSSC had ensured the safety of people at home, in the office, in school and everywhere.

    She said: “People do a lot of things injurious to their lives. To ensure that life and property are safe, we assist people to have a rethink on how they can avoid danger.

    “Our motto is: ‘Work Safe, Live Safe’. Our vision at the Lagos State Safety Commission is to proactively make safety the lifestyle of Nigerians and turn Lagos to a world-class city. Our mission is to develop policies and strategies that will build a sustainable safety culture through regulated and coordinated safety system.

    “Safety is about you and your neighbours. If the next person to you is vulnerable safety-wise, the vulnerability will eventually affect you. During an inferno, it is the smoke that easily kills victims. Many houses don’t even have smoke alarm. We’ve been educating people to have this.”

    The director-general said the commission reached out to the affluent, the middle class and the masses in the urban areas and at the grassroots in its campaign of safety consciousness, adding: “We are working to attract investors to Lagos State.”

    She noted that it used English language and local dialects during campaigns to spread safety messages.

    According to her, “we hold summits regularly to disseminate safety information to people. We work with the private and public sectors. We educate Nigerians on how to work safe, live safe, rescue themselves from danger and protect their environment from hazards, such as flood, erosion, road damage and so on. We also educate them to protect their health by eating nutritious food and living in a healthy environment.”

    Mrs. Odebunmi, the pioneer DG of LSSC, said the commission developed standards, guidelines and regulations updating policies, while maintaining links with MDAs, local governments/local council development areas, professionals and stakeholders.

    She added that initiatives, such as establishing safety champions in the public service, mandating the private sector to establish functional HSE department, construction/manufacturing summits, an intensive safety management initiative for school authorities, events and gatherings in public places, have contributed to achieving the set goals.

  • Nigerians in Diaspora lament polls shift

    Nigerians in Diaspora lament polls shift

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has continued to receive knocks over the postponement of the general elections from February 14 and 28 to March 28 and April 11.

    A group canvassing support for the All Progressives Congress (APC) in the United States, the Progressives Platform for Change (PPC), said that over 250 of its members who arrived the country because of the presidential poll, were disappointed because of the shift

    The PPC is a platform with over 400 members, which has structures in both Nigeria and the United States.

    Addressing reporters in Akure, the Ondo State capital, its Coordinator, Mrs. Emprss-Omolara Olaleye, said no fewer than 250 members are in the country because of the polls.

    She noted that the PPC, whose members are indigenes from the 36 states, came home to mobilise the people to collect their Permanent Voter’s Cards (PVCs).

    She said despite all their efforts, which include taking off from their places of work and abandoning their businesses in the US to exercise their franchise as Nigerians, INEC at the end postponed the poll for six weeks.

    According to her, “we are disappointed because before leaving the US for Nigeria what we heard was that INEC was fully ready for the polls and we have also read in some online newspapers that the security operatives are fully prepared for the polls.

    “It was this that motivated members of our group to storm our country and to join other Nigerians in electing a credible leader as a president.

    “We still remain firm that every disappointment is a blessing and I am also very sure that Nigerians are fully ready to effect a change. Nigeria wants good leaders like Muhammadu Buhari and Prof. Yemi Osibanjo.

    “We in diaspora, are sick and tired of the level of corruption in the country and we believe that the presidential candidate of the APC has the credibility to cleanse corruption from the country.

    “Pastor Adeboye of Redeemed Christian Church of God(RCCG) has once testified to the capacity of Prof. Osibanjo when he said that when you give him job to do, you can go back to your bed and sleep.

    “The same thing when Buhari was in the military, they will say “Sai Buhari, sai maigaskya”, which means I believe you because your word is your bond. Anything Gen. Buhari says, he stands by it. Any leader that cannot stand by their words, we don’t want them anymore.

    “We want a change and a credible person as leader; we want to return to our country; we are only in US just because our previous and present governments have failed us”.

  • Don advises Nigerians on attitudinal change

    A professor of Social Studies and Citizenship Education at Olabisi Onabanjo University, Ago Iwoye Professor Abiodun Ogunyemi has said that it was the responsibilities of all Nigerians to make the country great again.

    He said the negative attitude of the leaders and followership in Nigeria is responsible for the numerous challenges facing the country at the moment, urging Nigerians to pay more attention to national development.

    The university teacher who spoke at the 69th inaugural lecture of the institution said the evidence of the bad citizenship reflects in the way we handle our government affairs, business, economy, marital and family relationships, cultural life, legal practice, religion and ethical conduct and more importantly, education sector in Nigeria.

    The Don who tagged the lecture: “The Search for Good Citizens and the Curriculum as Compass”   highlighted some newspapers headlines report to buttress his point that the attitude of many Nigerians is responsible for the challenges facing the country at the moment.

    Ogunyemi described good citizens as the one who obey and respect the law of the land adding that a good citizen would be honest in all his private and public dealings. He said it was the duty of each citizen to be devoted to duty, ready to help the needy and sympathetic to others.

    He maintained that the job of restructuring the country should not be left in the hand of the leaders alone, adding that individual also must make the effort to ensure the success of national development.

     

  • ASUU to Nigerians: don’t get frustrated by shift

    ASUU to Nigerians: don’t get frustrated by shift

    The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) has appealed to the citizens not to be frustrated by the polls’ shift, but to ensure they collect their Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs).

    Its President, Dr. Nasir Fagge, in a phone interview, urged Nigerians to ensure they use the polls to usher in new leaders that are interested in the people and the nation’s development.

    Dr. Fagge noted that the challenge before Nigerians is how to ensure the emergence of a leadership with focus on the people and the nation’s institutions.

    The 1999 Constitution, according to him, is not the solution to Nigeria’s problems.

    He added that a new government should give the country a people-friendly constitution, which will not encourage people to steal, but guarantee equitable distribution of wealth and income.

    The ASUU president noted that this was necessary since insurgency and terrorism in Nigeria were the results of denial of people’s rights.

    Also yesterday, the Ibadan Zonal Coordinator of ASUU and Chairman of University of Ibadan chapter, Prof. Segun Ajiboye, said hiding under security ruse would not help pro-election postponement forces to frustrate the genuine efforts of Nigerians seeking change.

    He urged Nigerians not to agonise, but organise towards ensuring that the new set of leaders that will emerge in the country are those with genuine interest for the masses.

     

    “The decision is a serious setback for Nigerian democracy. But we should remain steadfast. This is time-buying game. It will not work. Let us organise and not agonise,” he said.

  • Nigerians in Diaspora disagree

    Nigerians in Diaspora under the aegis of the Buhari Friends Organisgaion Network has kicked against Federal Government’s decision to postpone the polls.

    The group described the postponement as a third term plot as well as a sign of desperation of the ruling party.

    Coordinator of the group, Mr. Charles Whate, in a statement in Jos, Plateau State yesterday, said: “We have observed that Prof. Attahiru Jega, the INEC chairman, was bullied and threatened by the presidency into postponing the February elections. The sighting of security as the reason for the postponement is ridiculous and makes a mockery of Nigeria in the eyes of the international community.

    “The situation in Nigeria is not even near that of Pakistan, Afghanistan, Syria and Iraq, yet all those countries conducted their elections despite the monumental security challenges.

  • Nigerians urged to shun violence

    A member of the Eti-Osa Local Government Chieftaincy Committee and the Secretary, Elegushi Royal Family, Chief Muritala Adedoyin Elegushi, has urged Nigerians to shun violence before, during and after the elections.

    Elegushi, the Alaawe of Ikate land, who spoke in Lagos yesterday, said people should not see election as a do-or-die affair.

    According to him, winners should be magnanimous in victory and losers should be gallant because the most important thing was the survival of the country.

    He decried the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) for postponing the elections to March 28 and April 11 because of insecurity.

    Said he: “If the Federal Government cannot contain the Boko Haram insurgency between 2011 and now, how are we sure it will tackle the militias before the elections?”

    Chief Elegushi advised youths not to allow politicians to use them to cause violence because of money.

    “Most politicians’ children are in overseas, safe. Politicians are wise. They hide their children in overseas and use the children of the poor to foment trouble, exposing them to danger. Youths should not risk their lives because of pecuniary gains.”

    Elegushi enjoined the electorate not to sell their votes, adding that they should elect candidates who could perform.

    His words: “Nigerians should not just obtain Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs), they should exercise their franchise. INEC should, however, be impartial.”

  • ‘Make health care affordable to Nigerians’

    Promoters of the Invitro-Fertility (IVF) technology, also known as test-tube babies, have called on governments to  make healthcare at all levels affordably to the citizenry.

    Doctors Preye Fiepai and Eli Shikari, Gynaecologists made the call at the 10th anniversary celebration of the Bridge Clinic-an IVF centre, held in Port Harcourt the Rivers state capital recently.

    The duo held that assisted conception remains the only solution to the increasing problem of infertility among couples, but regretted that high cost of accessing the process is a challenge to many Nigerian families.

    They appealed to governments at all levels, Non-Governmental Organizations (NGO) and organized Private bodies to rally around these families by helping in subsidizing the cost of this treatment the same way they gave support to Ebola and HIV/AIDS, patients to overcome their challenge.

    Fiepai noted that including IVF treatment into the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS) would go a long way in achieving this.

    He said, “We hope that health care in Nigeria will be made more affordable to those who require it, especially in the area of assisted fertility.

    “This is because one of the main challenges people face is the cost of receiving care. Beyond assisted conception, not many people are able to afford services in private clinics, and unfortunately the public health system is not able to meet a lot of our needs.

    “The National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS), is one way that we can achieve this and we hope that as the years go on, the Scheme will be open to provide services to those who are unable to pay from their pockets.

    “In most civilized countries nobody pays out of pocket for this kind of services, you can only do so if you have a pull from which money is provided.”

    In his view, Shikari called for increased number of centres and clinics where the treatment could be accessed in the country as in parts of other African countries.

    “Some of the indications for IVF treatment to include, women who experience unexplained infertility, those that suffer both tubal blockages, those men that suffer low sperm count among others.

    “With this technique women that are infertile can have their babies. IVF technique was discovered in the United Kingdom (UK), in 1978.

    “Although the fertility rate in Nigeria is high, the infertility rate is quite high and it is attributed to Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) otherwise known as infection, which resulted in tubal damage in women, and with the assisted conception technique the problem of infertility can be surmounted.

    “I observe that the treatment (IVF), centres in Nigeria are still not enough; there are so many of the centres in Egypt and South-Africa but it is not so in Nigeria, despite that Nigeria was one of the first African countries  to introduce IVF technique( 1980).”

     

  • Vote for credible candidates, Abatemi-Usman urges Nigerians

    The Vice Chairman, Senate Committee on Niger Delta Affairs, Senator Nurudeen Abatemi-Usman, has called on eligible voters in the to vote for candidates that will bring about development at all levels of governance, regardless of whatever political parties they belong to.

    According to a statement by his media assistant, Michael Jegede, the senator, representing Kogi Central Senatorial District made the call while addressing the mammoth crowd that came to show him solidarity, upon his arrival in Okene to formally inform members of his constituency that he was  in the Senatorial.

    Abatemi-Usman was among the senators, who recently quit the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) as a result of the injustice meted out to them in the last primary election. He has secured the ticket of the Progressive Peoples Alliance (PPA) to pursue his second term ambition in the Senate.

    The PPA senatorial candidate in Kogi Central said: “I thank you all for your unflinching support all this while since you gave me the mandate to represent you in the Senate. I have come to let you know that I am still fully involved in the senatorial contest for Kogi Central holding on February 14, 2015. I am now running on a different platform which is the Progressive Peoples Alliance (PPA).

    “My dear people, I seek your continued support and I assure you that I will not relent in my pursuit to ensure the sustenance of peace in Ebiraland, where political thuggery and violence will continue to remain a thing of the past. I urge you, and indeed, the entire Nigerians, not to vote for party in the coming election, but to look out for credible candidates that will change things for the better in the interest of the masses, irrespective of the political party on whose ticket they are running in the election.”

  • Nigerians set to roll over Tunisia

    Nigeria’s Under-23 (Dream Team VI) marksman Onyekachi Samuel Peter has said his side will go for outright victory against the Tunisian Under-23s in the two-legged warm-up in Tunis.

    The new Enyimba hitman is among the 21 players the side’s head coach, Samson Siasia, named for the pre-All Africa Games test match with the North Africans today and January 28 in the Tunisian capital.

    Peter said his goal will be among the goals that will nail the Tunisians in the two legged warm-up matches.

    “We’ve planned and worked very hard for the friendly match against the Tunisian opposite in Tunis and I’m positive we’ll achieve something decent.

    “The domestic players want to carve a niche for themselves and Nigeria with the rare opportunity. We’re going for outright victory in both matches even though the matches are mere warm-up games.

    “I’m promising a good goal among the goals that will unsettle the Tunisians in the encounters. We want to use the friendly ties to make a bold statement of our preparedness to qualify Nigeria for the upcoming All Africa Games as well as the Olympics,” said the former Abia Warriors goal poacher to supersport.com.

    The team together with the head coach, Samson Siasia, departed the nation’s shores on Thursday for Tunis.

    Others to be guided by the assistant coach, Fatai Amoo, will feature in the one-week annual pre-season Super Six tournament in Abuja, together with Nigerian champions, Kano Pillars, Enyimba, Dolphins, Warri Wolves and the Under-20 side, Flying Eagles.

  • Waku: Nigerians ‘ll not re-elect Jonathan

    Waku: Nigerians ‘ll not re-elect Jonathan

    Senator Joseph Waku is a chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Benue State. He is also a leader of the Arewa Consultative Forum (ACF). In this interview with TONY AKOWE in Abuja, the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), he speaks on  the controversy sorrounding the party’s governorship primaries in Benue, the North’s quest for power-shift and the chances of the APC at the polls.

    What is your assessment of the campaigns by the President and his challenger, Gen. Muhammadu Buhari?

    I spent about one hour listening to my President soliciting for votes from Nigerians. All I could deduce is that the man is out of ideas, out of touch and he will soon be out of power. I found a frustrating President, rather than a confident man. I saw a lot of frustration in him. I saw how visibly angry he was with himself. Above all, I discovered that he himself is a thug rather than saying Obasanjo looks like one, behaves or acts like a thug. He did not speak the way a President should speak. As a normal human being, you will realise that even our tradition does not allow you to talk about a father in the manner he did. No matter how angry you are against Obasanjo, you cannot call him a thug because he fought to keep this country united before becoming President. He risked his life at the war front to liberate Jonathan. Otherwise, he would have been enslaved by the Igbos. If not for the civil war, which Obasanjo fought to keep Nigeria together, he would been enslaved and his identity would have been totally lost. For you to get up and address that man in such a way is uncivilized. No wonder that Nigeria need a President who is civilized, cultured, learned and has tradition to respect. I believe that he should slow down, convince Nigerians about what he need to do, rather than abuse leaders that have made this country survive for you to come and benefit from.

    Dr. Jonathan said that Buhari, who did not buy any weapon for the military, is not talking about tackling insurgency. What is your reaction?

    That is to show you clearly that the man is not intelligent. Buhari spent 18 months in office and Jonathan has spent six years. What Buhari achieved, even as a GOC, Jonathan has not achieved as the President. When Chad invaded Nigerian territory during the Shagari administration, Buhari moved in and recaptured the villages and even went ahead to seize some Cameroonian villages. He just not informed. As President, you don’t rule the country by emotions. You rule with fact and articulate position. Do you compare somebody who rule for 18 months with that who rule for six years? Even the budget preparation, how long does it take? Even Buhari had bought weapons for the military then, how useful would they have been now when he was in power over 30 years ago? What has he done with the new innovations in place now. If Buhari had bought vehicles for the military 30 years ago, would they have been useful in the current dispensation? So, you can clearly see Nigeria’s misfortune, by bringing somebody who has no idea of governance into a training school. Nigeria is no longer about training people to rule. We have gotten to the position where we need people with lots of experience, especially in a situation like this when the nation is about collapsing under a novice.

    The insurgency seems to have defiled solutions. What is the best way to handle it?

    If you remember, some years ago when the insurgency started, I said that Jonathan was benefiting from it. In fact, I went further to say that he created this insurgency. He told Nigerians that he knows those who are sponsoring Boko Haram and went further to say the areas where they exist. He said they were in his government, in the legislature and in the judiciary, as well as the police. We expected him to arrest them. A commander-in-chief and chief security officer of the federation telling you that he know those involved in the insurgency; what stopped him from arresting them? I think he is benefiting from it. As I keep saying, he knows that he is losing this election very fast and so, he created this insurgency to cut away part of the country, so that the voting population there might be reduced. But, what he does not know is that the people are determined to vote where ever they are.

    Why is the Arewa Consultative Forum (ACF), which has been agitating for power shift, is divided over the candidature of Buhari? 

    There is no division in the ACF regarding who becomes the candidate of any political party, not even Buhari. We are non-partisan and so, our job is like that of an umpire. We moderate and for all our children who wants to get into politics, we advise them not to get into crisis. So, we are non partisan. I am sure you are referring to a dissident group called Northern Elders Council headed by an outdated northerner who has never in his life won an election, even as a councillor, Tanko Yakassai. I am sure that he is the person you are referring to. Otherwise, the north is united about who become President of this country, particularly a northerner. They always believe that based on the PDP zoning system, a northerner should be a candidate. The APC, which does not subscribe  to zoning, has decided on a credible Nigerian, who happens to be a northerner. There is no division in the north. There is division and hatred for those who are either criminally-minded and are afraid of going back to jail or who intends to take to crime. These are the people against Buhari in the north and in Nigeria generally. No Nigerian who wants this country to progress is against Buhari. It is only people whose hands are not clean that are afraid. But, we keep telling them that Buhari will not run a vengeance government. He will not witch-hunt anybody. We are all Nigerians and together, we shall build a united Nigeria. But, that is not to say that law and order will not be allowed to take its course. Some of those who mismanaged the responsibility may be called to question. It may not even be Buhari. Assuming that I am the governor of Benue State today and I decided to look into the multitude of loans that has been accumulated over the years and how they will benefit the people of Benue, would you say I am witch-hunting? Of course not, because I just want to articulate the position and prioritize some areas of governance to move forward. That is bound to happen in any organisation for there to be sanity.

    How can violence be averted at the general elections?

    You can clearly see evidence of violence in the PDP and its presidential candidate. Look at the way he spoke as if he were a garage boy who is ready to release the hunting dogs. On his part, Buhari tells you exactly what he wants to do. But, Jonathan is short of mentioning the names of those he wants to attack for fears of the electoral laws. He really has nothing to offer. They are banking on the security.  How can the Directorate of State Security become the mouthpiece of a political party, like Merilyn Oga has been doing and she has not been checked or called to order by the authorities. This is most unfortunate. What is the duty of the PDP publicity secretary? If you say my party is inflating membership, what has that got to do with INEC or the electoral processes. It is not every party member that has voting card and so, what has that got to do with hacking into INEC website? You can see the provocation and yet, the government is not saying anything. So, we are not preparing ourselves for violence and we will not. We know the consequences of violence because it can lead to loss of life. When we form government, are we going to preside over corpses? We want to provide services to Nigerians. Therefore, we are not interested in violence and we cannot encourage violence from any quarters.

    There are those who believe that INEC will not be able to deliver a free, fair and credible election and those who hold this view have consistently pointed at the distribution of the Permanent Voters Cards…

    Look at what the President said, that he has ordered INEC that is supposed to be an independent body. The President could not even tell that the nation that he has advised INEC, but that he has ordered. What that means is that he was holding them before for reasons best known to government. Why do you now want to order them when we have less than 40 days to elections. At the same time, INEC came out to say that whoever has his name on the register will be allowed to vote. But if such people are not allowed to vote, that is where problem will arise because we will not support any Nigerian being disenfranchised. Here again, the President has gifted. The last election was held in 2011 and four years is enough time for INEC to have concluded all these things. It is only now that he is saying that he has ordered INEC, an independent body. He is only telling Nigerians that he with held this before and maybe now, he has seen that it will not be in his advantage or he has worked out the mechanism to make it work in his favour. We are too intelligent in this country and we are monitoring the activities of everybody, no matter how highly placed.

    What actually happened during the APC governorship primaries in Benue?

    You heard correctly that there was no primary to elect or select  a governorship candidate.  Samuel Ortom’s name was forwarded. I thought that was April fool.

    Don’t you think that this will affect the chances of the party in the state?

    That is what we are trying to avert, otherwise, we will have no candidate from the point of view of the law.