Tag: residents

  • Ocean surge renders Oyo residents homeless

    An ocean surge has rendered many residents of Olori village, a riverine community in Oyo-East Local Government, homeless.

    A river called Oba passes through the village. It is a threat to the villagers, especially during the rainy season. Movement to and from the community is usually hindered.

    The non-availability of a bridge on the river has worsened the villagers’ plight.

    A canoe is provided by the community, but it is not effective when there is a downpour, as the river overflows its bank.

    Two years ago, 10 persons in the village drowned when a canoe they boarded capsized.

    Oyo State Governor Abiola Ajimobi’s representative, his deputy, Moses Adeyemo, visited the village. Lawmakers from the House of Assembly, led by Speaker Monsurat Sunmonu, also visited the village.

    The Deputy Governor and the Speaker, who is from the village, pledged to assist the villagers by ensuring that a bridge is built across the river.

    The then council Chairman, Taiwo Quasim, also pledged to provide another canoe.

    The community head, Chief Teslim Adekunle II, said: “Our immediate need now is a bridge across the river. Without this, the community will be cut off from the rest of the world.”

    He hailed Governor Ajimobi for transforming the state and lauded the Alaafin of Oyo, Oba Lamidi Adeyemi, for his leadership qualities.

    Chief Adekunle, however, urged the government to investigate the N157 million allegedly earmarked for the building of a bridge across the river by the last administration, which was not executed.

     

  • The Lagos residents registration initiative

    Society has become more mobile and the information held electronically about persons and services by government agencies and other bodies have substantially increased. There is a growing need to integrate the residents of Lagos State into e-government initiatives to enable the services provided by government to be fully utilized and also provide an accurate picture for government policy and planning.

    The Lagos State Residents Registration initiative has the potential to address key challenges facing e-government and other initiatives. Various e-government initiatives have been enabled to collect electronic data and each operates autonomous of each other. To provide a more accurate picture for government policies and planning, a link must be established between these various stores of data.

    It is with a view to institutionalizing this process that the Lagos State Residents Registration Agency, LASRRA, was established in 2011 by an enactment of state law, by which it was fully empowered to implement a residents database and identification card program for Lagos State.

    The goals of the agency include, establishing a reliable and updateable database of all residents of Lagos State, providing useful information for social, political, business and financial activities, creating and documenting a unique means of identification of Lagos State residents, providing a highly secured identification card for all residents of the State and removing the veil of anonymity from every citizen of the state

    The Residents Register is an electronic database, currently being developed by LASRRA which contains demographic information of all residents of the state. It is a governmental, centralized, trustworthy and comprehensive source of information that would assist the state government with decision-making process and allocation of resources as it contains important and vital information about residents of the state.

    On the other hand, the residency card is an electronic means of identification and authentication that LASRRA undertakes to issue to all residents of the state. Using sophisticated technological features, the residency card is a safe means of identification of persons and verification of their identities. It contains a unique reference number (residency number) that links every individual to his/her own personal and biological data. The residency number serves as a reference for the respective individual in his/her identity-proved transactions with government bodies.

    It is instructive to stress that the card is produced and issued at no cost to all residents while registration is equally done free of charge to all residents.

    The residency card is a safe and precise means of personal authentication and identification. Its primary aim is to make it easier for the card holder to obtain all governmental and non-governmental services in the future. Among the most important benefits and features of the card are enhanced sense of belonging, protection of identity, ease and convenience and providing an integral database. The residency card is primarily designed for the administration of the services that the Lagos State government provides for the people that reside in the state. Its objective is to enable efficiency in the allocation of resources to meet the needs of the people. Using the contact details provided at the time of registration, all those that have registered and their cards are ready for collection, will be notified by SMS to collect their cards at the LASRRA LG/LCDA office nearest to their place of residents.

    It should be emphasized that biometrics simplifies identity verification as the 10 fingerprints, signature and face image of residents are captured as part of the registration process. A challenge for residents, mostly the needy, is the lack of documentation to establish their identity. Once these residents enroll for an identity number linked to their biometrics, they can afterward confirm their identity multiple times, anywhere in the state and to any agency, by providing their demographic details or biometric scan.

    It is important to accentuate that every one that is currently residing in the state is required to register. Once you have been residing in the state for six months or more, you are eligible to register. This registration would, henceforth, be a prerequisite to accessing the services provided by Lagos State government for its residents. In cases of people relocating from one place in Lagos to another, it must be stressed that people must be responsible for their own data and it is their responsibility to ensure that their data is up to date. If not, when accessing government services and there are discrepancies they will be sent back to update their data.After registration, quality checks are done followed by correction processes (where required). The data is then sent to the database, where the data undergoes various stages of screening and validations. This ensures that the source of data is authenticated ensuring that no duplicate exists. After which, the resident unique identification number is generated.In case of any errors, the record goes on hold for further enquiry. Corrective actions are taken on such as contacting the applicant via the contact information given. This may take over five weeks to resolve.If a card needs to be replaced due to loss, theft or change of information, the resident should contact any of the registration stations across the state and make a request.

    However, as earlier stated, the first residency card is provided free of charge, subsequent cards may be at a charge. For clarification purpose, the registration exercise does not confer any status other than that the card holder at the time of registration resides in the state and it is not an attempt to discriminate against non-Lagos indigenes as it is open to everyone that lives in Lagos State, irrespective of ethnic origin, nationality, religious affiliation, age etc. Till date, the initiative has been able to create over 1,000 jobs for the pilot scheme. In preparation for the commencement of its statutory responsibility of registering the residents of Lagos State, LASRRA organized a one day open forum for public and civil servants in the state. The purpose of the forum was to further enlighten the citizens about the project as well as share views with them.

    Governor Babatunde Raji Fashola, who was represented at the event by the State Head of Service, Prince Adesegun Ogunlewe, said that his administration will continue to make itself accessible to the general public through regular such public engagements.

    On a final note, let me stress, once again, that the main purpose of the resident registration initiative is to ensure proper planning as well as efficient allocation of the state’s scarce resources. It should not be misconstrued as census.

     

  • Flood: Lagos warns residents

    A piece of advice came yesterday from the Lagos State Government for residents of some flood-prone communities. They should seek refuge elsewhere for fear of floods.

    The advice was issued for residents of Ajegunle, Owode-Onirin, Owode-Elelede, Kuramo Beach, Alpha Beach, Okun-Mapo, Okun Ajah, Mende in Maryland, Ijora-Badia and Iwaya, among others.

    Commissioner for The Environment Mr Tunji Bello, who gave the advice, specifically urged those living on flood plains, low-line areas and other riverside areas to be extremely careful in the coming months.

    He said: “As we approach the second half of the year, Lagos residents are being alerted to prepare for high-intensity rains with accompanying wind and thunderstorm from the month of July,” the commissioner said in a statement by Mr Fola Adeyemi, a director in the ministry.

    The government’s warning came on the heels of a Nigeria Meteorological (NIMET) report, which lists Lagos was listed among other states prone to heavy flooding this year.

    Besides, it was part of the precautionary measures being adopted by the state to sensitise Lagosians ahead of the peak of the rainy season.

    He further said: “As the intensity of the rain increases in July, Lagosians are advised not to panic whenever it rains as they will start to experience accumulated water concentration on some parts of the roads and highways, depending on the intensity of the rains.

    “Lagosians are, however, assured that the accumulated water will recede in no time.”

    According to the commissioner, the downpour since January has raised the water level in the state, thus weakening the retention capacity of the soil.

    Bello, however, assured that whatever level of flash floods recorded during the rains, will gradually be discharged within 24 hours after, adding that the drainage channels had been cleared to accommodate large volumes of storm water.

    The commissioner explained that Lagos, being a coastal state, cannot but be susceptible to flash floods anytime there is torrential rainfall, adding: “However, what is of utmost importance to this administration is to ensure that whatever flash flood experienced is effectively discharged through the channels that have been dredged and cleaned up in anticipation of this year’s rain.

    “Lagos residents are further encouraged to relate effectively with deployed resident engineers and drainage maintenance officers whose phone numbers were recently published in the print and electronic media, for the public to alert them whenever they have flooding challenges.”

    The commissioner urged Lagosians to be safety-conscious in the days ahead, advising them to avoid going out during the rains except when compulsory.

    Restating that his ministry had intensified its mid-rain cleaning and maintenance programme, Bello assured all that the government would not to relent until zero tolerance is attained on flooding.

  • Residents flee community over gas pollution

    Some residents of Ogboinbiri Community in Southern Ijaw Local Government Area of Bayelsa have fled their homes due to gas pollution caused by leakage from an oil rig.

    Former Chairman of the Ogboinbiri Community Development Committee (CDC), Mr. Newton Daniel, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Yenagoa yesterday that the incident occurred on Thursday night till late Friday.

    “The gas leak which started at about 8p.m. on Thursday, came from an oil rig owned by Agip Oil Company and covered the whole area. Everybody fled till late Friday,” Daniel said.

    He said that the leadership of the CDC visited the scene shortly after the incident and met with some of the workers on the site, who confirmed that there had been gas leakage from the rig.

    Daniel said the community had dispatched a delegation to meet with Agip officials, adding that the company had not responded as at the time of this report.

    The project officer of the Environmental Rights Action (ERA), an NGO, Mr. Alagoa Morris, said the group had received report of the leakage.

    “I have received the report of the gas leakage, which they say is very serious and had forced many people in the area to flee their homes due to the pollution.”

    He said the report reaching ERA indicated that the gas leakage was from a rig working on an oil wellhead in the community and promised to visit the scene.

    The spokesman for Agip Oil Company, Mr. Tajudeen Adigun, declined to comment on the matter on phone.

     

  • Residents rejoice as new bridge links 24 Akwa Ibom communities

    Residents rejoice as new bridge links 24 Akwa Ibom communities

    Conceived some years ago for the purpose of connecting more than 24 communitiesseparated by water for several years in Akwa Ibom State, the completion of Iwuo-AchangBridge ushers in a new life for residents, writes KAZEEM IBRAHYM

    AS Lagosians hail Governor Babatunde Fashola’s administration for constructing the Lekki-Ikoyi Link Bridge, the people of Akwa Ibom State, particularly residents of Ibeno community, are also rejoicing over the construction of a 600-metre bridge by the Niger Delta Development Commission across the Qua Iboe River, using an indigenous contractor.

    Built by Viche Resources, a subsidiary of the Roudo Group, the Iwuo-Achang Bridge is meant to connect about 24 communities in two local government areas in the state, which had been separated by the river over the years. For decades, residents of the affected communities had to travel in boats with the attendant risks before the NDDC came to their rescue. Now, with the bridge in place, they have an alternative means of transacting business and relating with one another.

    The newly constructed seven-kilometre road and 600-metre bridge connect villages like Iko, Rikang, Akata, Opolom, Ikot-Enwang, Okoroutip, Iwochang with 16 other communities. The Nation investigation revealed that before the project was completed by Viche Resources, most of the contracts awarded to foreign companies in the area were abandoned because of the swampy terrain, communal restiveness and other security issues.

    Completing the project was not without some pains to the construction firm as two of its employees were abducted by kidnappers in the thick of the militancy in the Niger Delta region. But with the determination of the company’s management to end the sufferings of the people of Ibeno and open up the economy of the area, the construction of the road and bridge was pursued to a logical end.

    Speaking with our correspondent, one of the construction company’s engineers, Tony Maduka, explained that the company had to cast the beams for the bridge about five kilometres away from the project site and had to transport them with barges. According to him, the company also had to travel 40 kilometres to procure sharp sand to fill the earthwork for the road.

    Explaining some of the problems encountered while executing the project, Maduka said he gave glory to God that the company was able to deliver the project many people had thought was not possible. “It is now clear that what foreigners can do, indigenous contractors can also do it. The first day I went to the site, I was afraid because the place is a mangrove and swampy area, but I summoned courage that the job would be done.

    “We encountered a lot of challenges while doing the job because the area is swampy. During the militancy era, it was terrible because two of our engineers were kidnapped. The project was carried out by mainly Nigerians. Most Nigerians are surprised that an indigenous contractor could build such a state-of-the-art bridge. To them, such construction could only have come from Julius Berger, Gitto, RCC, Setraco and other foreign construction companies operating in Nigeria.

    “The contract has been satisfactorily completed and it is waiting to be commissioned. It is to the credit of Viche Resources and NDDC that a Nigerian company was able to undertake and complete such a challenging job while other expatriate companies given jobs in similar terrains abandoned them.”

    Corroborating Viche’s development efforts, an elder in Ibeno, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said it is a shame that our own government has allowed itself to be hypnotised by the ancient argument of disparity in the expertise of local and foreign firms even in the face of glaring engineering and scientific feats of our people who end up doing the job for these foreign firms.

    His words: “Most of the major jobs awarded by the Federal Government and its agencies since independence have expatriate companies as 95 per cent beneficiaries. Most of these firms were companies with no history until they got to Nigeria. Their promoters only come to Nigeria with their brief cases, elegant words and confusing arguments.

    “The only investment they make is their hotel bills and they end up with mouth-watering contracts. They build a portfolio of resources so extensive that it guarantees them influence and authority where they should not have it. They put down enough seed money to finance the propaganda that Nigerian contractors are not competent or disciplined. It is a shame that our own government has allowed itself to be hypnotised by the ancient argument of disparity in the expertise of local and foreign firms even in the face of glaring engineering and scientific feats of our people who end up doing the job for these foreign firms.”

    Appraising the standard of the project, the Managing Director of NDDC, Dr. Christian Oboh, said encouraging local contractors to execute projects is part of the core mandate of the commission. “That is what the policy of the NDDC says because the Niger Delta area is a challenging environment. Those that must work there must have an idea of what the environment looks like. It is Nigerians who know how challenging the environment is.

    “When we came here, we realised that most of the local contractors were actually not performing because they were not being paid. I can tell you that very few Nigerian contractors would put their money because of instability or whatever happens in NDDC. We reached an agreement where we singled out that particular project and many other projects that we will put under fast track. I can tell you that I am happy Viche Nigeria didn’t fail NDDC.”

    Asked if NDDC was willing to extend the dualisation of the road so that the people of Eastern Obolo could benefit from the gesture, Oboh said there were plans by the commission to extend the road to Eastern Obolo. But he said the due procurement process must be followed.

    Oboh said: “The process of procurement must be followed. We appreciate what Viche Resources has done. But as the managing director, I do not just have the sole power to award the contract to Viche Nigeria. If I do, I would have given Viche Resources the process a long time ago. What we have done is that we are trying to provide for it in our budget.”

    The paramount ruler of Ibeno, Dr. Effiong Achianga, said the construction of the bridge had brought relief to the people. According to the monarch, there is need for government to encourage the local contractors in the construction industry so that the kind of competition the country is experiencing today in the telecommunication industry would be replicated in the construction industry.

    He said: “Viche Resources impressed me with what they have been able to achieve. I was initially skeptical about their competence, but having seen what they have done here, we are all happy.

    “I am appealing to the NDDC and the Ministry of Niger Delta to allow Viche complete the extension of the road to Eastern Obolo and other communities within Ibeno.”

    In the mean time, the people are in joyous mood as they await the inauguration of the 600-metre Iwuo-Achang bridge.

  • Residents lament as Ekiti demolishes slum

    •Landlords warned against selling marked buildings

     

    The Ekiti State Government yesterday began the demolition of shanties in Atikankan, a slum in Ado-Ekiti, the state capital.

    The exercise began around 12 noon.

    Owners and tenants of the affected structures ran around to salvage their belongings.

    Some of them accused the government of insensitivity, claiming that they were not given demolition notice.

    Mrs. Oladejo Roda said she had not been compensated.

    Alhaji Yakubu Edunmare said: “I received N380,000 for my shop, but I have not been paid for my house, which is also being demolished.”

    The Commissioner for Land, Housing and Urban Development, Mr. Remi

    Olorunleke, told reporters that majority of those affected had been compensated.

    Olorunleke said: “The ministry made several efforts to reach the few, who have not received their cheques, until last December, when the money was returned to the official coffers. The ministry will have to reapply for the fund before they can be paid.”

    The Permanent Secretary of the Bureau of Lands, Mrs. Falodun Olufunke, read a letter dated last December 22, which was written to those who failed to pick up their cheques.

    She said the demolition victims assaulted officials of the bureau, who approached them with the cheques.

    Olorunleke said he heard that some landlords were trying to sell properties marked for demolition and warned that such landlords would be dealt with.

    He said over N380 million had been paid as compensation to those whose buildings were demolished in Ado-Ekiti in the last one year.

    The commissioner said the demolition was to curb crime in Atikankan and upgrade the slum.

    He said the demolition of the 78 structures obstructing the waterways in Adebayo, Olorunda, Adeparusi and housing estates on Afao road would begin soon.

    The demolition will affect the Crownbiz Hotel in Adebayo.

    Olorunleke said landlords with government approved documents of their buildings would be compensated.”

    He said the demolition would prevent flooding and calamities associated with it.

     

  • Some of us perished in flames, others drowned in Lake Chad, say Baga residents

    Some of us perished in flames, others drowned in Lake Chad, say Baga residents

    The tales they tell are scary. Some sound fairy-like. The military believe the stories cannot be true. Survivors in the bloodbath in Baga, Borno State relive their experience of the black weekend to New York Times

    Days later, the survivors’ faces tensed at the memory of the grim evening: soldiers dousing thatched-roof homes with gasoline, setting them on fire and shooting residents when they tried to flee. As the village went up in smoke, one said, a soldier threw a child back into the flames.

    Even by the scorched-earth standards of the Nigerian military’s campaign against Islamist insurgents stalking the nation’s north, what happened on the muddy shores of Lake Chad last month appears exceptional.

    The village, Baga, found itself in the cross hairs of Nigerian soldiers enraged by the killing of one of their own, said survivors who fled here to the capital of Borno State, 100 miles south. Their home had paid a heavy price: as many as 200 civilians, maybe more, were killed during the military’s rampage, according to refugees, senior relief workers, civilian officials and human rights organisations.

    The apparent size of the civilian death toll – staunchly denied by Nigerian military officials, some of whom blame the insurgent group, Boko Haram, for the carnage – has prompted an unusual uproar.

    Though heavy civilian casualties are routine in the military’s confrontation with Boko Haram, with dozens dying in poor neighbourhoods since 2010 as the army searches for “suspects,” Nigeria’s politicians usually have little to say about them. Past massacres of civilians in retaliation for soldier deaths have passed largely with impunity.

    This time, there have been calls in Nigeria’s national assembly for an investigation, and the government has come under harsh criticism at home and abroad, including the United States. The military has said it has begun its own inquiry, and some longstanding observers of the country’s heavy-handed fight against Islamist militants say a tipping point may have been reached.

    “This is coming at a time when we have had similar situations” elsewhere, said Kole Shettima, chairman of the Center for Democracy and Development in the capital, Abuja. “People are tired of the excuses the military is giving, and that’s why they are demanding an investigation. This time it’s different. There is a crisis of legitimacy in the military.”

    But in a country where corruption abounds and accountability is rare, others wondered whether it would truly become a watershed moment – or get brushed aside as an unfortunate side effect of fighting a dangerous insurgency.

    “This Baga is just on a bigger scale, but they have been doing this for ages,” the governor of Borno State, Kashim Shettima, one of the first officials to reach Baga afterward, said of the military. “They’ve not adhered to the rules of engagement,” said Mr. Shettima, who is not related to the democracy advocate. “When you burn down shops and massacre civilians, you are pushing them to join the camp of Boko Haram.”

    Yet, he continued, “we are in a Catch-22 situation. Boko Haram is a deadly insurgent force that needs to be confronted, the governor said, but not by a military that terrorizes its own people. “We need them to carry out their duties in a civilised manner.”

    Some Baga residents who did not perish in the flames drowned while attempting to escape into Lake Chad, refugees here in the state capital said. Others were attacked by hippopotamuses in the shallow waters, officials said. Soldiers shot people as they ran from the burning houses, refugees said.

    “Many dead, many dead,” said Mohammed Muhammed, 40, a taxi driver from Baga. “People running into the flames, I saw that. If they didn’t run into the flames, the army will shoot them.” As flames enveloped the houses – “they used petroleum,” he said of the soldiers – he fled into the surrounding desert scrub.

    “If you come out” from the flaming houses “they will shoot you,” he said. “Please, sir, charge them in the international court!” he shouted.

    Isa Kukulala, 26, a lanky bus driver who had left Baga that morning, gave a similar account: “They poured petrol on the properties. At the same time, they are shooting sporadically, inside the fire. They took a small child from his mother and threw him inside the fire. This is what I have witnessed.”

    Hundreds of residents fled into the bush, where they lived for days in harsh conditions, and are only now trickling back into the town. “The aged people, the people that couldn’t run, most of those people were burned,” said Antony Emmanuel, a fish buyer. “Small children, their parents left them, they were burned.”

    Borno State officials have said hundreds of houses were destroyed in the blaze.

    The army has effectively blocked many journalists from getting to Baga – it is in a zone where Boko Haram exercises partial control – and it kept out relief agencies until the middle of last week. Cellphone service has been cut off. In a brief statement a week after the episode, Brig. Gen. Austin Edokpaye, the commander of the multinational joint task force – Nigeria shares intelligence with neighbouring countries, though its soldiers generally do the shooting – said one soldier was killed “while 30 Boko Haram terrorists lost their lives” and “unfortunately six civilians” were killed. Ten “other civilians were injured in the cross-fire,” he said.

    Nigeria’s director of defence information, Brig. Gen. Chris Olukolade, angrily rejected the accounts of residents and others. He said that “the burning, the killing is done by Boko Haram, not by the soldiers. Anybody blaming the soldiers must be a sympathser with Boko Haram.” He said that “Boko Haram was using the houses to shoot out at soldiers.”

    But the picture given by civilian officials in relief agencies and state government, along with the one presented by refugees, was very different, with the vast majority of deaths attributed to the military.

    “More than 200 dead, this is what people in the town confirmed,” said a senior relief official who asked not to be identified out of fear of retribution by the military. “Actually, my boys told me the number is far higher than the 200 reported,” the relief official said.

    A senior official under the governor, Mr. Shettima, who is not affiliated with the governing party, said: “The soldiers went on a rampage. Because, you know, that’s what soldiers do in Nigeria. It’s really crazy here.”

    General Olukolade responded angrily to such assertions, saying, “The politicians intend to create a haven for Boko Haram around our state.”

    In the accounts of refugees and officials, the killings started after a few gunmen, most likely Boko Haram members, engaged a detachment from Baga’s military post in a firefight on the evening of April 16.

    “Two people came, they said they were Jama’atu,” said Mohammed Bella Sani, a fisherman from Baga, using Boko Haram’s name for itself. Boko Haram has a heavy presence in that area of fluid national borders, officials say, and has even chased away all government presence, including officials and police officers, from many rural districts.

    In Baga, the soldiers went for reinforcements after one among them was killed, residents said. “A team of soldiers came back shouting, and they started firing indiscriminately,” Mr. Sani said.

    “They set my neighbour’s house on fire, and people started running back to save the neighbour,” said Mallam Ali, a bus driver. And the soldiers began shooting into the crowd, he said.

    “They were firing from the armoured vehicles,” said Alhadji Adamua, a clothing seller at Baga’s market. “I saw them putting fire on people’s houses. They are the security of the state. They have no right to kill anybody. They are supposed to protect the people.”

     

  • Amnesty for Aba residents

    SIR: There was a time Aba, the Enyimba city and the commercial nerve center of Abia State was a no-go area in terms of insecurity, ranging from kidnapping, armed robbery, ritual killing and other related vices. The development brought almost to a halt all social, political, commercial and developmental activities in the town and even culminated to people relocating to other less violent areas for safety.

    However, the situation was later laid to rest by the intervention of the federal troops. Thanks to Governor Theodore Ahamefula Orji who initiated the move.

    Aba has been a wonderful and vibrant city since inception. In fact it was the envy of the neighbourhood states until after sometime when it became an eyesore as a result of infestation of dilapidated and moribund industries including myriad of deplorable roads. This pitiable situation made people’s lives unbearable and boring.

    Now normalcy has returned to the town the residents expect the rehabilitation of those moribund industries like: Aba Textile mills, Aba Metallurgical complex, Aba Glass Industry and many others including the reconstruction of the abandoned roads that was truncated as a result of the insecurity situation to continue in order to bring succor to their lives like other residents in the neighbourhood states.

    No doubt, the kidnap saga discouraged and diverted the state and federal governments attention from making the town a befitting edifice. But that notion should not linger so long.

    I therefore plead on behalf of Aba residents for amnesty as the town has been the pride of the state in particular and the nation in general. It should not be forgotten that Aba is the home of the former CAF champion, Enyimba Football Club and the site of Ariaria International market.

    President Goodluck Jonathan should help rebuild Aba

     

    • Nkemakolam Gabriel

    Port Harcourt

     

  • Residents urge Fayemi to sustain free health mission

    Beneficiaries of the Ekiti State Free Health Mission, a medical intervention of the state government, have urged Governor Kayode Fayemi to sustain the initiative.

    Over 65,000 people in the grassroots benefited from the seventh edition of the programme, which was organised by the government in conjunction with the House of Assembly.

    The edition was executed as the constituency projects of the lawmakers.

    Residents, who trooped out in large numbers, described the free treatment, drugs and eye glasses as “examples of the dividends of democracy”.

    Mr. Albert Iyunade from Odo-Ayedun in Ikole Local Government said the programme brought relief to indigent patients suffering from hypertension, diabetes, eye and dental problems.

    Mrs. Opeyemi Awe from Aisegba, Gbonyin Local Government, said the programme was one of the best initiatives of the Fayemi administration.

    Commissioner for Health Prof. Olusola Fasubaa told reporters yesterday that the mission covered 13 of the state’s 26 constituencies.

    Fasubaa said he was impressed with the turnout of residents. He said the next edition would cover the remaining 13 constituencies.

    The commissioner said the programme helped to generate statistics that would help improve the government’s health policies.

    The head of the team of doctors, Dr. Dolapo Fasawe, said many hypertensive and diabetic patients were not aware of their health status until they were tested.

    Mrs. Fasawe said: “Many of them were not aware of their health status. During the mission, we told them their health challenges, how to prevent the ailments and how to manage them.”

     

     

     

  • Residents rue property loss on pipeline route

    Residents rue property loss on pipeline route

    Residents of Ikotun and Ijegun in Igando/Ikotun Local Council Development Area of Lagos who live along the Pipeline have expressed their misgivings over the demolition of their properties by the Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) without sufficient notice.

    The demolition exercise affected owners of structures built on the right of way of the NNPC pipelines who refused to heed to earlier warnings from the corporation to move away from the right of way of the pipelines.

    So, they came face to face with two bulldozers from the NNPC which pulled down structures that stood on the right of way of the NNPC pipelines.

    Residential buildings, churches, mosques, walls, stores, kiosks and other makeshift structures that extended beyond the stipulated line for the pipelines were destroyed by the menacing bulldozers.

    Before they could blink, the bulldozers had started pulling down their precious structures. The pillaging continued until late in the day.

    In confusion, people scurried to evacuate their properties. Some which could not be evacuated were seen among the rubbish heaps. The bulldozers had reduced the offending walls, stores and intruding living apartments to piles of rubble.

    By the time they finished for the day, the once-boisterous and bubbly area, wore a lonely forlorn look. Features that made the pipeline milieu attractive are now nothing but memories. They no longer count for anything; as they gave way for the normal straight roadway.

    While narrating their ordeals, there were tell-tale signs of hopelessness and helplessness in the voices of those who spoke to Newsextra. Their voices, shrilled with anger and distress, pierced the dense atmosphere which has become charged with some of the victims’ lamentations. Tiny drops of water formed like beads on their faces expressive of pain and resignation.

    Among the victims displaced by the exercise and who were in a flutter of disquiet and confusion, there was a rumble and a grumble of suppressed anger. Many of the displaced persons huddled up in groups. They looked downcast and worn out. Some others were in pains and anguish, gnashing their teeth and gazing into illimitable distance while others, with chins in palms, looked confused and sober.

    When asked whether they were given enough notice by the NNPC before the demolition of illegal structures on the right of way of pipeline locations, majority of those affected by the exercise who spoke to Newsextra in confidence, said they were not given sufficient notice or information concerning the planned demolition exercise.

    For instance, a member of a mosque that was affected by the exercise who pleaded anonymity told Newsextra that “there was not enough notice that our property which had initially been marked for demolition would be pulled down on a particular day. If they had given us enough time, we would have made alternative arrangements.”

    Another resident of the area Mr. Sunday Ekong former Travel Manager of the Daily Times said: “Though we feel pained about the loss of properties, since it’s about development and our safety, we have to accept it in good faith.”

    On the issue of notice, he said that the NNPC had, since 2007 when there was pipeline explosion at Ijegun which claimed so many lives and property, started mounting pressure on the residents to move away completely from the right of way of the pipelines locations.

    He said: “To be objective and fair to the NNPC, it has kept on reminding residents along Pipeline Street of the need to move away from the pipeline zone for safety. To me, enough notice had been given. But it is not that the residents affected were recalcitrant or willfully refused to obey instructions. It could be a matter of non-availability of easy alternative, judged by the economic situation in the country.

    “Even though one may feel sad seeing properties erected with heard-earned money destroyed, as long as it’s for development and safety, one should not have anything against the government.”

    Justifying the action, an official of the NNPC who would not want his name mentioned for lack of competence to comment on the matter told Newsextra that “the residents had been served notice of government’s intention for several times but they seemed to ignore them.”

    When contacted for comment on the issue, Col. Ibiba Briggs of the Nigerian Army Corps of Engineers, Bonny Camp, Lagos said the Nigerian Army Corps of Engineers was only contacted to help in supervising the “operation maintain the right of way of the pipeline installations by the Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC).”

    Col. Briggs maintained that the action by the NNPC was for public good, even as he said that “when there was pipeline explosion in Ijegun in Ikotun, lots of lives were lost and property worth millions of Naira lost. One believes that NNPC’s decision to clear the right of way of the pipelines was taken for safety reasons.

    “Petroleum products are highly inflammable and when people build structures on pipeline installations, they heat up the area, thereby making it very dangerous to live on because they become combustible and cause bodily harm to the residents. One also believes that it is part of the Present government’s transformation agenda.”

    He also revealed that it was not only the Ikotun-Ijegun axis that the Nigerian Army Corps of Engineers is clearing, adding that the Corps has cleared the right of way of the pipelines from Warri to Extravos, Port Harcourt to Aba, Warri to Benin-City, Mosinmi to Ibadan and Mosinmi to the Atlas Cove as requested by the NNPC.